Mark Thompson (reporter)

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Mark Thompson
File:Mark thompson, 2005.jpg
Thompson addressing a gathering at Boston University in 2005
Born c. 1953
New Haven, Connecticut, USA
Residence Kensington, Maryland
Alma mater Boston University
Occupation National security correspondent, TIME magazine
Spouse(s) Diane
Children Jonathan & Geoffrey

Mark Thompson (born about 1953) is an American investigative reporter who won the 1985 Pulitzer Prize for public service journalism.[1][2][3][4]

The Pulitzer Prize gold medal award.

Thompson graduated from Boston University in 1975 and began his career where he grew up, at the Pendulum, in East Greenwich, Rhode Island.[4] After a spell in Pontiac, Michigan, he moved to Washington in 1979, where he joined the Washington bureau of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. There he won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service recognizing a five-part series published in March 1984. Thompson covered, or uncovered, a design flaw in Bell helicopters that went uncorrected for a decade and led to the deaths of 250 U.S. servicemen; in consequence of his work, 600 Huey helicopters were grounded and modified.[1][2][3][4] He joined Knight-Ridder Newspapers in 1986, where he reported extensively on the Persian Gulf War and the U.S. invasion of Panama.[4] In 1994, he joined TIME magazine as defense correspondent,[5] where he has written or co-written cover stories on the Army's use of prescription drugs on soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan,[a] the Marines' V-22 Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft,[b] the Army at the breaking point,[c] the wisdom of restarting the military draft,[d] and profiles of then-United States Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld,[e] and then-General Tommy Franks.[f]

Thompson also reported extensively from Afghanistan and Iraq, reporting on the progress of the conflicts there and the unexpected lack of armor for the U.S. military,[g] and has written four major pieces on the true costs of the Iraq war—an early look at the war's wounded,[h] a study of the U.S. troops killed in a single week,[i] the lonely vigil of an Ohio family whose son was the first American soldier in this war to be listed as missing in action,[j] whose remains were ultimately recovered in March, 2008,[6] and the death of a GI at the hands of Army medicine a year after he was slightly wounded in Iraq.[k]

Selected works

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References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 "Public Service". The Pulitzer Prizes. Retrieved 2013-10-29.
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