 |
|
Award-winning investigative
reporter Kelly O'Meara's
coverage of the adverse effects
of psychiatric mind-altering
drugs is virtually unmatched by
any other journalist in the
United States. During her
six-year tenure (1998-2004) at
The Washington Times' Insight
magazine, O'Meara wrote a series
of articles (more than two
dozen) examining the
prescription drug industry and
the connection between
prescription psychiatric drugs
and the increasing number of
school shootings. She focused
heavily on the lack of science
behind the psychiatric diagnoses
for which the drugs are
prescribed, and the adverse
reactions linked to
antidepressants. Her articles
resulted in record sales of the
issues in which they appeared,
as well as press coverage and
interview requests that continue
to this day. Among the national
and international press that
have featured her articles or
asked her to appear are Fox
News, the O'Reilly Factor, CBS
News, BBC, ABC's 20/20 and Hannity and Colmes.
For her work, The National
Foundation for Women Legislators
named O'Meara Investigative
Reporter of the Year in 2001 and
the following year, the Citizens
Commission on Human Rights gave
her their International Human
Rights Award. |
Other
major investigative reports that O'Meara
filed while at Insight include a 12-part
series entitled How the Money Works,
that probed Federal agency financial
reporting. Her examinations of annual
updates of department and agency audits
focusing on missing money showed that
trillions go unaccounted for at agencies
such as the Department of Defense and the
Department of Housing and Urban Development.
In another
series, U.S. Money Laundering,
O'Meara looked at Enron, the Bank of New
York and an estimated $500 billion of annual
money laundering in the U.S. financial
system. She also explored the relationship
between Washington and capital markets.
In her
series, Local Government Corruption,
O'Meara investigated corruption in county
governments and the judiciary, specifically
the County of Los Angeles court system. She
was the first reporter to break the story of
the Los Angeles judges' slush fund
account and trigger an independent audit of
that account, which has since been
transferred to the county. She received the
1999 Friend of the Child Award from the
California Protective Parents Association
for her articles on the Los Angeles family
courts.
Prior to
working as an investigative journalist, O'Meara
spent sixteen years on Capitol Hill. In
1996, as Administrative Assistant for
Congressman Michael P. Forbes (R., NY), she
was the lead investigator for the 1996 TWA
800 air disaster off the coast of Long
Island, New York. As a caseworker for
Congressman Raymond J. McGrath (R., NY),
whom she served from 1981 to 1992, she
conducted a three-year investigation into
the 1987 controversial death of a Marine
Corporal, who was serving in San Salvador at
the time. O'Meara also served on the staff
of Congressman David A. Levy (R. NY) and
Congressman Kika de la Garza (D. TX). She
holds a B.S. in Political Science from the
University of Maryland. |