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Podcast: How We Reported on the American Red Cross

People wait in line to get food items from a Red Cross Disaster Relief truck in the Rockaways following Hurricane Sandy on January 25, 2013 in the Queens borough of New York City. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

The American Red Cross has called its post-Sandy relief efforts "near flawless." But internal documents and on-the-record accounts from responders paint a different picture of how the renowned charity handled its mission -- casting doubt on whether the Red Cross is ready for the next disaster.

ProPublica's Justin Elliott joins Steve Engelberg on the podcast this week to discuss his latest report with Jesse Eisinger and NPR's Laura Sullivan on the Red Cross and how it botched several key components of its relief efforts, whether it was wasting massive amounts of food, simply not showing up to areas affected by the storm or, most disturbingly, diverting crucial resources for public relations purposes.

"The Red Cross has denied a lot of elements of our story, but they have never come to us with anything that they say is inaccurate," Elliott says.

ProPublica began reporting on the Red Cross and its post-Sandy relief efforts earlier this year, Elliott notes, originally focusing on the lack of transparency around how the charity spent over $300 million donated after the storm.

A key force driving the reporting forward has been tips generated by asking readers with experience or information about the Red Cross to contact Elliott at his email: [email protected].

"In Silicon Valley, they have this phrase that describes these transactions," Engelberg says. "They say they try to make things on the web when you're buying something ‘frictionless’ and I think there's some merit in journalism trying to make it frictionless to contact a reporter with information."

You can listen to this podcast on iTunes, SoundCloud and Stitcher, or read more:

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