Jamie Grey 536f2f
Director of Investigations 2z1k63
1c3q4t

Jamie specializes in crime, political and data investigative reporting and producing. Prior to coming to InvestigateTV, she was an assistant professor at the University of Missouri School of Journalism and managing editor/chief investigator for the NBC in the Columbia/Jefferson City area. She has prior reporting experience in Iowa and Idaho and has won various state and regional awards for her investigative work. Jamie is a graduate of Mizzou, with degrees in journalism and higher education leadership and policy analysis. 1d5p4s
‘See you in court’: Consumer Product Safety Commission say they are being fired by President Trump 131h5o
Updated: May 9, 2025 at 5:19 PM EDT
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By Jill Riepenhoff, Jamie Grey and Caresse Jackman
The three Democrats who serve on the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission announced they were fired by President Donald Trump but say he has no authority to do so.
Critical aviation safety improvements left in limbo for years over costs, competing priorities 2l4863
Updated: Apr. 30, 2025 at 5:22 AM EDT
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By Emily Featherston, Joce Sterman, Scotty Smith and Jamie Grey
NTSB recommendations gleaned from accident investigations are not always adopted — even after additional deadly crashes.
Long-idling trains create health, environmental concerns nationwide c2zq
Updated: Apr. 24, 2025 at 9:45 AM EDT
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By Joce Sterman, Scott Smith, Brandon Wissbaum and Jamie Grey
Idling trains are a huge problem in communities across the country - with emissions impacting the environment and the health of people who live nearby as trains sit for hours pumping out pollutants.
Lack of regulation in growing IV therapy, hydration industry potentially puts patients at risk 3b1157
Updated: Mar. 17, 2025 at 6:27 AM EDT
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By Joce Sterman, Daniela Molina and Jamie Grey
InvestigateTV discovered this industry is operating in a medical gray area, with numerous questions being raised about treatments, sanitation and oversight.
High School Hustle: Athletes cash in on name, image and likeness as states grapple with regulations w2x1z
Updated: Mar. 5, 2025 at 7:44 AM EST
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By Chris Nakamoto, Jill Riepenhoff and Jamie Grey
NIL regulations vary by state for high school athletes. Our investigators take an in-depth look at the journey of Jada Williams and Richie Clementi as they navigate the business side of sports at a young age.
Be Your Own Investigator: finding what you need in a nursing home 3q4l19
Updated: Feb. 25, 2025 at 1:46 PM EST
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By Jill Riepenhoff, Jamie Grey and Joce Sterman
What should you look for when researching nursing facilities? How can you find what you need? Our investigators help you here.
Deadly plane, helicopter collision renews concerns over airport ‘squeezed’ to its limits 85649
Updated: Feb. 7, 2025 at 12:24 PM EST
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By Joce Sterman, Emily Featherston, Jamie Grey, Brandon Wissbaum and Scotty Smith
Following the deadly midair collision on Wednesday, our investigators found that dozens of close calls have been reported at Reagan National since 2010.
Defective: Parents left to be product testers with their babies as subjects 8555c
Updated: Feb. 4, 2025 at 1:11 PM EST
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By Jill Riepenhoff and Jamie Grey
When a new toy or baby invention hits the market, most parents assume those products have undergone rigorous safety testing. Our investigators found this isn't always the case.
Sidewalk barriers set up after New Orleans terror attack were already in city, not used New Year’s 4u95v
Updated: Jan. 3, 2025 at 8:25 PM EST
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By Brendan Keefe, Jamie Grey and Emily Featherston
The sidewalks of the French Quarter are now protected by portable, 700-pound barriers that the City already had in its possession.
Why Bourbon Street barricades were not in place to protect against vehicle attack j4u5f
Updated: Jan. 2, 2025 at 6:47 PM EST
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By Brendan Keefe, Jamie Grey and Emily Featherston
Workers in New Orleans have added temporary barricades near Bourbon Street to stop possible, future attacks, but why were the existing barricades not used on New Year's Day?
Defective: Baby product industry insiders questioned over involvement with setting own safety standards 6y1k2x
Updated: Sep. 12, 2024 at 11:14 AM EDT
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By Jill Riepenhoff, Jamie Grey and Lee Zurik
Parents, consumer advocates, pediatricians and others are sounding alarms about a baby product named in death reports: weighted infant sleepwear.
Defective: Toy companies continue selling similar products following recalls 3c6r1x
Updated: Apr. 8, 2024 at 4:25 PM EDT
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By Jamie Grey, Jill Riepenhoff and Lee Zurik
Recalls of dangerous consumer products can sometimes take months if not years. But even after a recall, similar-looking products remain on the market. InvestigateTV examined toys that had been recalled and similar-looking products that weren't.
Defective: Colorful water beads remain for sale despite retailers’ pledge to pull kids product 3t4t2y
Updated: Jan. 29, 2024 at 2:48 PM EST
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By Jill Riepenhoff, Jamie Grey and Lee Zurik
Thousands of children have been injured by ingesting water beads - tiny specks about the size of a cookie sprinkle that expand 100 times their size when exposed to water.
Permission to Pay: Technologies touted as fix for health insurance frustrations draw criticism, legal action 1l3iq
Updated: Nov. 27, 2023 at 3:48 PM EST
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By Emily Featherston, Jamie Grey and Lee Zurik
Patients and doctors say the health insurance claims process is increasingly lacking humanity as one major insurance company is taken to court over its use of a computer program.
Outgunned: School police officers don’t always have access to guns with best range d2t6q
Updated: Sep. 18, 2023 at 5:25 PM EDT
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By Brendan Keefe, Olivia Oliver and Jamie Grey
School shooters are showing up with rifles, but school officers first on the scene are often armed only with a pistol.
Defective: Dangerous consumer products find their way into America by ship and through online retailers 503z1k
Updated: Aug. 28, 2023 at 3:04 PM EDT
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By Jill Riepenhoff, Jamie Grey, Lee Zurik, Austin Hedgcoth and Conner Hendricks
Every year, the SC finds thousands of everyday household products for sale online or arriving at shipping ports that fail to meet federal safety standards. It is illegal to sell products in the U.S. that have been banned, recalled or failed to meet federal safety standards.
Defective: After recalls, Americans continue to die and get injured as products remain in homes and for sale online 472l17
Updated: Jul. 31, 2023 at 3:09 PM EDT
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By Jill Riepenhoff, Jamie Grey and Lee Zurik
An InvestigateTV analysis of Consumer Product Safety Commission data shows that since 2000, the agency has had to re-announce the recall of at least 46 products because the original alert did not reach the ears of consumers and, in many cases, continued to cause harm.
Electric vehicle ‘charging deserts’ plague Georgia, nation 5nv39
Updated: Jul. 27, 2023 at 1:29 PM EDT
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By Joce Sterman, Jamie Grey and Rachel Polansky
Areas where charging stations – where drivers plug in and re-charge – are scarce or even nonexistent.
Electric vehicle charging deserts plague much of the country, especially rural areas 1b2936
Updated: Jul. 24, 2023 at 1:02 PM EDT
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By Joce Sterman and Jamie Grey
President Joe Biden's istration is leading a push to get more electric vehicles on the road, but the lack of charging infrastructure, particularly in rural areas, poses a challenge for potential EV drivers.
Permission to Practice: Doctors, patients say insurance prior-authorizations put profits over people 6i645h
Updated: Mar. 20, 2023 at 3:53 PM EDT
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By Emily Featherston, Jamie Grey, Lee Zurik, Bailey Williams and Payton Romans
Insurance companies say these reviews lower costs and protect patients, but what requires advance permission varies plan to plan, and critics argue the policies get between a patient and their doctor.
Defective: The federal government knows that consumers are using hundreds of dangerous everyday products v4a60
Updated: Nov. 14, 2022 at 12:13 PM EST
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By Jill Riepenhoff, Jamie Grey and Lee Zurik
When a company learns a product it sells could be defective and dangerous, it has 24 hours to let the federal government’s Consumer Product Safety Commission know about it. But it could take months or years for the public to find out about the company’s possible concerns, if they even come to light at all. InvestigateTV has been battling SC and companies to disclose information about the products companies have sounded the alarm on – an alarm that remains relatively silent.
Secret Subsidies: Program meant to help farmers in trade war overspent, lacked transparency and compliance checks 2b3n6o
Updated: Oct. 24, 2022 at 9:53 AM EDT
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By Madison McVan, Investigate Midwest, Emily Featherston and Jamie Grey
Experts say $23 billion USDA program set a precedent for spending without Congressional oversight and had a concerning mix of political influence and limited compliance monitoring.
Ignition: Spontaneous electric vehicle fires prompt recalls, but some owners stalled waiting on repairs 2q6x3e
Updated: Sep. 26, 2022 at 1:49 PM EDT
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By Joce Sterman, Jamie Grey and Daniela Molina
Electric vehicle fires can start when cars are parked or charging, which car safety experts say make them different and more shocking than other car fires. Companies are working on implementing a fix for defective batteries, but it's taking longer than owners would like.
Unequal Education: Special education policies differ from state to state 1y6ut
Updated: Aug. 22, 2022 at 5:45 PM EDT
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By Joce Sterman, Daniela Molina, Jon Decker, Jamie Grey, Justine Arens, Yelta Reyna, Hannah Lorenzo, Samantha Latson, Lizzie Wright and Lauren Truex
The law allows states to create their own special education policies based on the federal IDEA framework. As a result, there are varying policies and parents are left trying to navigate complicated systems.
Defective: When government safety officials learned about 13 deaths tied to an infant rocker, a federal law prevented them from immediately alerting the public 2t1i1w
Updated: Aug. 15, 2022 at 5:19 PM EDT
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By Jill Riepenhoff, Jamie Grey and Lee Zurik
After the deaths of 13 children over the last 12 years, this summer, Fisher-Price and the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission warned parents not to let their children sleep in certain rockers the company has made since the 1990s. Now, InvestigateTV has discovered that during a 2021 Congressional hearing, the company dodged questions about whether it currently had products on the market linked to children’s deaths.
Operation Profit: Some surgeons pull in millions by owning medical device companies 2848t
Updated: May 23, 2022 at 6:34 PM EDT
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By Jamie Grey, Lee Zurik and Payton Romans
Sometimes a surgeon is the salesman. Across the country, there are physician-owned distributorships where doctors own part of a medical device company and then buy (or have their hospital buy) that hardware to use in their own surgeries.
Democratic lawmakers push U.S. Transportation Secretary for faster changes to crash test dummy standards 75928
Updated: Mar. 14, 2022 at 1:24 PM EDT
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By Emily Featherston, Jon Decker and Jamie Grey
The bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act requires research into the gender gap in vehicle crash testing, but lawmakers want Secretary Pete Buttigieg to take action now to close the Collision Division.
Defective: Government agency shackled by law often takes years to issue recalls on potentially dangerous products 32416t
Updated: Feb. 14, 2022 at 6:18 PM EST
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By Jill Riepenhoff, Lee Zurik and Jamie Grey
It takes years for the Consumer Product Safety Commission to remove dangerous products from the market because of its cumbersome rule-making process and ineffective recalls that don’t incentivize consumers to return or destroy dangerous items.
Buy the Book: Public dollars pay for Netflix, trips to the zoo and karate lessons for kids learning from home 3j6w1h
Updated: Jan. 31, 2022 at 6:08 PM EST
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By Emily Featherston, Lee Zurik and Jamie Grey
Programs bridging public schools and homeschooling are growing fast, but critics worry about what that means for the future of education.
Secret Acres: Foreign-owned agricultural land inaccurately tracked by government 716k2x
Updated: Jan. 24, 2022 at 5:02 PM EST
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By Jamie Grey, Emily Featherston, Lee Zurik, Jon Decker and Cory Johnson
Foreign entities have bought 13 million more U.S. farm acres in 10 years, but agriculture policy scholars say the total could be far more.
Collision Division: Federal traffic safety agency has yet to address gender disparity in crash testing despite outcry on Capitol Hill hr53
Updated: Aug. 10, 2021 at 3:05 PM EDT
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By Emily Featherston, Lee Zurik, Jon Decker and Jamie Grey
As lawmakers debate including female drivers in more crash test standards, the agency in charge is staying quiet.
COVID-19 map tracks current hot spots d5r6x
Updated: Aug. 5, 2021 at 2:47 PM EDT
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By Jamie Grey and Lee Zurik
Updated daily, this COVID-19 hotspot map illustrates where the largest number of new cases (relative to population) have been reported in the last seven days.
Full Documentary: Bridging the Great Health Divide showcases efforts to fight disparities in rural America fz29
Updated: Aug. 4, 2021 at 5:56 PM EDT
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By Lee Zurik, Jamie Grey, Jill Riepenhoff, Daniela Molina and Owen Hornstein
Bridging the Great Health Divide explores issues in rural America through the lens of residents, doctors and other health care providers.
Bridging the Great Health Divide documentary highlights shortcomings and solutions in rural American health care 3i6y3u
Updated: Jul. 28, 2021 at 1:17 PM EDT
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By Jamie Grey and Lee Zurik
Gray Television stations will air a documentary about disparities in rural health care and the people working to bridge the great health divide.
Gas stations, liquor stores allowed to snap up benefit money without providing extensive healthy food options 185t5q
Updated: Jul. 19, 2021 at 6:24 PM EDT
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By Jamie Grey, Lee Zurik and Daniela Molina
The purpose of the food stamp program is to help low-income families access healthy foods, but in rural America, that can be difficult.
Collision Division: Lawmakers cross party lines to address disparity in vehicle safety 5p7072
Updated: Jun. 30, 2021 at 1:28 PM EDT
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By Emily Featherston, Jon Decker, Lee Zurik and Jamie Grey
Bills in both the U.S. House and Senate look to update crash test dummies and testing procedures to make sure drivers are equally protected.
Deserted: Access to healthy, fresh and affordable foods is elusive for millions who live in rural America 6563g
Updated: Jun. 14, 2021 at 5:05 PM EDT
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By Jill Riepenhoff, Daniela Molina, Jamie Grey and Lee Zurik
Before last year food insecurity impacted about 10% of all U.S. residents. Experts estimate that number has at least doubled since the pandemic.
Secret Subsidies: Payments to farms allowed to stretch far beyond rural America, sowing concern about who gets what 4q45c
Updated: May 17, 2021 at 4:01 PM EDT
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By Emily Featherston, Lee Zurik, Jackson Hicks and Jamie Grey
The federal government gives out subsidies to help farms through tough times, but much of the information about these taxpayer-funded payments is kept secret.
Collision Division: Crash test standards favor men, despite women being at higher risk for injury and death when behind the wheel 1c4353
Updated: May 10, 2021 at 2:47 PM EDT
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By Emily Featherston, Lee Zurik, Jon Decker and Jamie Grey
Experts say one of the most d safety standards largely doesn't for more than half of all licensed drivers.
In Appalachia and the Mississippi Delta, millions face long drives to stroke care 5xoe
Updated: May 3, 2021 at 4:13 PM EDT
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By Aneri Pattani, Hannah Recht and Jamie Grey
Across the nation, nearly 800,000 people suffer strokes each year. When someone has a stroke, minutes matter, but hospital closures and other access issues mean millions of people find it difficult to get specialty stroke care quickly.
Cashing in on CARES: Pandemic relief money used to buy luxury cars, new homes 1f5121
Updated: Apr. 19, 2021 at 12:46 PM EDT
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By Jamie Grey and Sandra Jones
The federal government is cracking down on people it says fraudulently applied for and, in some cases, received money through pandemic relief funding programs.
Large swaths of rural America are health care deserts with too few primary care doctors, pediatricians, and OB-GYNs to care for residents 1p19d
Updated: Apr. 8, 2021 at 10:03 PM EDT
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By Jill Riepenhoff, Daniela Molina, Jamie Grey and Lee Zurik
In 207 counties in 2018, there wasn’t a family, general or internal medicine doctor – the primary care doctors mainly for adults, according to an InvestigateTV analysis of federal data.
Pattern of Protection 263k1a
Updated: Nov. 11, 2020 at 6:15 PM EST
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By Jamie Grey, Lee Zurik, Lauren Davis and Brianna Lanham
Families of those injured or killed by police say union contracts are protecting "bad apples" and stop police leadership from being able to have oversight. Union officials say police are highly scrutinized and need collective bargaining agreements.
Penalties at Play: Millions of dollars flow to nursing homes from fines they have paid for poor care a3y5o
Updated: Oct. 28, 2020 at 8:20 PM EDT
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By Jill Riepenhoff, Daniela Molina, Jamie Grey and Lee Zurik
Every year millions of dollars flow to nursing homes from a fund that is padded with fines collected from long-term care facilities that inspections show have put the health and safety of residents in jeopardy.
COVID on Campus: At the largest universities, data vary widely and lacks transparency 4e1g4f
Updated: Sep. 17, 2020 at 7:35 PM EDT
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By Jill Riepenhoff, Lee Zurik and Jamie Grey
Only around a quarter of the nation's largest universities publicly release active COVID-19 case information. Public health experts say the more data available, the better.
Prosecuted and Paid: Government doles out billions in coronavirus relief money to companies that paid out millions in fraud-related cases 375q3j
Updated: Aug. 20, 2020 at 4:03 PM EDT
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By Jamie Grey, Lee Zurik and Peter Buffo
More than 200 companies that paid the federal government for fraud related accusations in the last decade received billions of dollars in unsolicited relief money as part of the coronavirus bailout package.
COVID-19 Tracker: Check out the latest on test results around the country 2l2n4b
Updated: Jul. 6, 2020 at 4:25 PM EDT
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By Lee Zurik, Jamie Grey, Cody Lillich, Jill Riepenhoff and Megan Luther
InvestigateTV is monitoring coronavirus COVID-19 cases around the country and updating information here frequently.
Geared Up: Questions about police militarization arise again 2a145
Updated: Jun. 23, 2020 at 10:23 PM EDT
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By Daniela Molina, Lee Zurik and Jamie Grey
Since 2008, the U.S. military has sent more than 1,000 mine-resistant vehicles to local police departments at their request. Now, some are questioning the optics.