Kristina Goetz
Investigative Reporter/KyCIRKristina Goetz's investigative work has exposed drug pipelines, uncovered police corruption and targeted wasteful government spending. She broke the national OxyContin drug abuse story, reported the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks from New York City and went undercover with the Memphis police department. Goetz, a native of Owensboro, has worked for The Cincinnati Enquirer, The Commercial-Appeal in Memphis and the Arizona Republic. She was also a researcher and first-draft editor for former Watergate reporter Carl Bernstein, working extensively on his biography of Hillary Clinton. Her areas of specialty include higher education, military, law enforcement and public financing. Goetz has received the E.W. Scripps Award for Superior Journalism and was named Best News Writer in Ohio. She is a graduate of Western Kentucky University and received her master's degree from Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism. She is married and lives in Louisville.
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The University of Louisville is expected to increase both in-state and out-of-state undergraduate tuition by 3 percent for the next academic year.U of L's…
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A former top administrator at the University of Louisville has filed suit against the school’s board of trustees, alleging he was fired because he spoke…
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This story has been updated.A national animal rights organization has asked a federal agency to investigate what it calls preventable animal deaths at a…
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University of Louisville paid an academic search firm $65,000 plus expenses to find a new general counsel, but school records provide little detail about…
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Federally-licensed exhibitors and dealers of dangerous animals in Indiana won’t be subject to additional state regulations.A legislative proposal that…
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An Indiana state senator has proposed a bill that would put more restrictions on owners of dangerous animals in the Hoosier state.State Sen. Michael…
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Indiana state Sen. Michael Crider wants federal investigators to provide the public with an update on its investigation of a troubled exotic animal...
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In the wake of a Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting series that found a history of problems at an Indiana exotic animal refuge, current and...
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Kentucky and Indiana may be neighbors, but the state line marks the divide when it comes to who can have a wild animal as a pet and who can’t. Since...
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CHARLESTOWN, Ind.—A crowd of visitors sat mesmerized under a big-top tent this summer in rural Indiana watching two tiger cubs stalk stuffed toys...