Select Page
Sentinel Colorado for Oct. 25. 2018

AURORA | Sentinel Colorado received nine top statewide journalism awards this year, including first place for public service for months of work covering and analyzing Aurora police-involved shootings.

“We’re honored that our peers see the strength in the honest journalism we value, just like our readers do,” said Sentinel Editor Dave Perry. “All of these awards are hard won, but we’re most proud of being honored again with the public service award, which describes the mission of the Sentinel staff and journalists across the state.”

Sentinel staffers Kara Mason, Quincy Snowdon, Grant Stringer and Perry were honored by the Colorado Press Association for months of work investigating and editorializing on a spate of police-involved deaths. Reporters went to great lengths to provide readers with crucial details and insight about how people died at the hands of police during encounters.

The series of stories offered readers “top, well-written reporting,” judges said.

Reporter Grant Stringer was honored with two first-place awards. Top honors were given for an investigation into how for-profit education contractors have changed Colorado’s public and charter school landscape.

“Fascinating and thorough,” judges said about the story.

Stringer also received top honors for an investigation in a little-known EPA Superfund site in the region that poses environmental, health and economic risks far from a landfill designated a national hazard.

Editor Dave Perry received first place for column writing on a variety of topics.

“Dave Perry’s columns are laugh-out -oud funny,” judges said about his skewering local and national politicians, tourists and himself.

Grandview senior Darrian Leu-Pierre holds up the pair of track spikes he used on his way to winning the Class 5A state championship in the high jump on May 16, 2019, at Jeffco Stadium. Leu-Pierre wrote tributes on his shoes to honor his friend Lloyd Chavez, who was killed May 8. (Photo by Courtney Oakes/Sentinel Colorado)

Sports Editor Courtney Oakes received top honors for writing sports stories and features in 2019. He received first place for, “Leu-Pierre wins emotional state title for fallen friend,” a poignant take on a lost friend. Oakes also won first place for a feature investigation into how high-school athletes are affected by and learn to navigate fame on social media.

Oakes was also honored for his photojournalism work, tabbed for stunning boys swimming photos that were “beautiful images,” winning against tough competition.

Regis Jesuit sophomore Quinn Henninger won the diving championship at the annual Dick Rush Coaches Invitational for a second straight season March 23 when he scored 565.40 points to hold off Denver South’s John Ryan. Henninger had one of four event wins to help the Raiders win the Class 5A portion of the multi-classification meet. (Photo by Courtney Oakes/Sentinel)

Aurora presentation editor Robert Sausaman received top honors for his work designing Sentinel Colorado cover art, matching creative illustration with hard-hitting journalism.

“Nice range of simple design, to really intricate and complex,” judges said. “Somehow you’ve made even the simple stuff still make a big impact.”

Elizabeth Warren addresses the crowd during an organizing event for her 2020 presidential campaign, April 16 in the hangar at the Stanley Marketplace in Aurora.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

First place in news photography went to Philip B. Poston for a stunning shot of Sen. Elizabeth Warren speaking to an Aurora crowd during a political rally as a candidate for president.

“Beautiful image with great composition, color, lines and clean background,” one judge said. “The photographer obviously worked hard to get this frame.”

Wyatt leads Red Rock onto the scales to get his final weight before showing.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Wyatt waits with his dad to receive his Red Angus calf. Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Wyatt jokes with family and friends as he waits for the judging to begin.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Wyatt ties Red Rock to the railing of the arena as the exhibitors wait to show their calves.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Wyatt walks Red Rock through the pens in the Education Building of the National Western Complex to the arena for showing.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Wyatt brushes Red Rocks hair against the grain to resulting in a fluffier coat.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Wyatt washes Red Rock at his grandparents ranch.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Wyatt stands with Red Rock in the arena with other exhibitors during the Showmanship judging.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Wyatt stands with Red Rock in the arena with other exhibitors during the Showmanship judging.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Wyatt stands with Red Rock in the arena with other exhibitors during the Showmanship judging.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

A variety of grooming materials used for Red Rock.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Brittany puts the finishing touches on Red Rock before showing.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Wyatt Sandell looks through his families trailer at his newly acquired Red Angus calf.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Wyatt Sandell pulls a calf out of the ring after successfully wrangling it, to win a spot in the Catch-A-Calf Program.

Wyatt and Red Rock share one last moment together before Wyatt leaves the stock yards to go home.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Wyatt cries on his mothers shoulder after exiting the pen where he left Red Rock.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

After the competition ends, Wyatt walks Red Rock out of the arena to the stock yards.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Wyatt stands in a pen in the stock yards with Red Rock before having to leave his calf for good.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Wyatt plays with Red Rock, his Red Angus calf, on his grandparents ranch in Sedalia.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Wyatt leads Red Rock on a walk at the ranch on his grandparents land.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Red Rock, Wyatt’s Red Angus calf.

Wyatt leads Red Rock to the Wash Rack to give his calf a bath.
Photo by Philip B. Poston/Sentinel Colorado

Poston also won first place for “HIGHLY CALF-INATING: Kids catch a calf and sometimes a career,” a moving, months-long photo essay of an area teenager who raised a calf for a national competition.

Sentinel Colorado was also honored for having the best daily-newspaper website, recognition the Sentinel has garnered every year for more than a decade.

The post Sentinel Colorado wins top honors for journalism exploits, including public service appeared first on Sentinel Colorado.

This content was originally published here.