Jake Hooker (October 27, 1973 Newton, Massachusetts) is an American journalist and recipient of the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting and the Gerald Loeb Award for Large Newspapers[1] for investigations done while in China over concerns with how dangerous and poisonous pharmaceutical ingredients from China have flowed into the global market.[2][3][4]
He attended Milton Academy and Dartmouth College where he studied art history.[2] In 2000, he was a Peace Corps volunteer in China for two years; he taught English in Wanxian. His first published newspaper article about his life in Waxian appeared in The Boston Globe in 2001.[2] In 2003, he worked for the Surmang Foundation in China.[3] In his free time, he has learned Chinese. He currently works for the New York Times.[2][5]
(1974–1979) |
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(1980–1989) |
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(1990–1999) |
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(2000–2009) |
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(2010–2014) |
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