R.G. Dunlop
Investigative ReporterR.G. Dunlop is an award-winning member of LPM's Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting team. His work has exposed government corruption and resulted in numerous reforms.
In a 35-year career at the Courier-Journal, R.G. served as Eastern Kentucky bureau chief, Legal Affairs reporter, City Editor and State Enterprise Reporter. He is Peabody Award winner, a three-time finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and was twice a member of teams that won George Polk Awards.
Email R.G. at rdunlop@lpm.org.
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The Kentucky State Police fatally shot 41 people from 2015 through 2020, more than any other law enforcement agency in the state.
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As fatal police shootings have become a flash point in U.S. cities, they have also occurred at high rates in rural areas — largely without national attention.
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As fatal police shootings have become a flash point in U.S. cities, they have also occurred at high rates in rural areas — largely without national attention.
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Industrial parks sit nearly empty in counties spanning eastern Kentucky, the multi-million-dollar consequences of hollow promises to revive the region’s economy.
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They're the multi-million-dollar consequences of hollow promises to revive the region’s economy.
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A proposed wildlife center got a $12 million federal grant after promising to bring millions of dollars and thousands of tourists to eastern Kentucky. Four years later, residents are still waiting for the jobs they were promised.
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A proposed wildlife center got a $12 million federal grant after promising to bring millions of dollars and thousands of tourists to eastern Kentucky. Four years later, residents are still waiting for the jobs they were promised.
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At first glance, Montgomery County Jailer Eric Jones’ side gig as a partner in Kellwell Commissary LLC doesn’t look like a conflict. The jail Jones was…
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Elected Kentucky jailers have capitalized on the e-cigarette boom by forming companies that sell vaping products to inmates in other jails or by handing lucrative business in their own facilities to friends and family, KyCIR and ProPublica have found.
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Elected Kentucky jailers have capitalized on the e-cigarette boom by forming companies that sell vaping products to inmates in other jails or by handing lucrative business in their own facilities to friends and family, the Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting and ProPublica have found.