Clear It with Sidney | Hillman Foundation

Clear It With Sidney

The best of the week’s news by Lindsay Beyerstein

Clear It with Sidney

2026 Canadian Hillman Prize Winners Announced

Toronto (March 24, 2026) - The Sidney Hillman Foundation announced today the winners of the 16th annual Canadian Hillman Prizes

  • Print/Digital – Brendan Kennedy at the Toronto Star for “The Maplehurst Riot Squad”
  • Broadcast  – Harvey Cashore, Mark Kelley, Eva Uguen-Csenge, Daniel LeBlanc, Allya Davidson, Emmanuel Marchand for “Tax Hack: Identity Theft” and “The Denial Machine,” for CBC News the fifth estate
  • Small Market/Local News – Robert Cribb, Laurie Few, Susanne Reber, Wendy-Ann Clarke, Bruce Edwards for “Arachnid: Hunting the Web’s Darkest Secrets,” for the Investigative Journalism Bureau, TVO Today, Piz Gloria Productions, and the Toronto Star

Brendan Kennedy reported that jail guards had meted out unjustified, brutal punishment to nearly 200 inmates at the Maplehurst Correctional Complex, including a violent, mass strip-search. The Ontario government and the correctional officers’ union stonewalled and denied, but Kennedy found a video that proved it had happened. He broke story after story, each with new, shocking revelations. Jail officials launched a campaign to cover up what they had done, falsifying records, destroying potential evidence, and lying to investigators. To date, Ontario’s Ministry of the Solicitor General has refused to provide Canadians with information about what a judge described as “a disgusting and gross abuse of power,” one that should never have happened in Canada.

A years-long investigation by the CBC’s the fifth estate revealed that hackers had infiltrated the computer files of the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA), stolen the identities of unsuspecting citizens, and routinely duped the CRA into paying hundreds of millions of dollars in bogus tax refunds to imposters. Instead of properly investigating the hack, the CRA persisted for years in demanding that its victims repay the stolen money, ruining lives in the process. Then the fifth estate discovered and reported on another breach involving stolen identity. It affected 28,000 medical workers whose records were stolen in 2009 from British Columbia’s Interior Health (IH) agency and were still available for sale on the dark web. The province denied the hack, allowing identity scammers to steal from both the CRA and banks for more than a decade. Victims are still paying the price.

Arachnid: Hunting the Web’s Darkest Secrets is a six-part podcast examining the efforts to end the massive, global online trade in child sex abuse material. A small Winnipeg-based, non-profit organization, the Canadian Centre for Child Protection (C3P), has created a free, web-crawling tool that can quickly and easily trace the trade in these horrific images. All that stands in the way is the tech platforms’ refusal to use it. The podcast takes listeners around the world, exposing the vastness of the problem, the moral, legal and ethical failures that have allowed it to continue, and the unending trauma of society’s most vulnerable victims.

“This year’s Hillman prize winners remind us that courageous journalism is the cornerstone of democracy,” said Alex Dagg, Canadian board member of the Sidney Hillman Foundation. “By shining a light on government injustice, and holding the powerful to account, these journalists have upheld the public’s right to know.’

The Sidney Hillman Foundation will celebrate the 2026 honourees on April 9th in Toronto.

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The Sidney Hillman Foundation honours excellence in journalism in service of the common good. U.S. Hillman Prizes have been awarded annually since 1950 and the Canadian Hillman Prizes since 2011.

For more information please contact: Alexandra Lescaze


Trois Prix canadiens Hillman 2026 ont été décernés pour mettre en valeur un journalisme à la fois original et marquant

Toronto (24 mars 2026) – La Fondation Sidney Hillman a annoncé aujourd’hui les lauréats et lauréates de la 16e édition des Prix canadiens Hillman.

  • Presse écrite/Numérique  – Brendan Kennedy du Toronto Star pour « The Maplehurst Riot Squad »
  • Diffusion  – Harvey Cashore, Mark Kelley, Eva Uguen-Csenge, Daniel LeBlanc, Allya Davidson et Emmanuel Marchand pour « Tax Hack: Identity Theft » et « The Denial Machine, » produits pour CBC News, the fifth estate
  • Actualités locales/petits marchés  – Robert Cribb, Laurie Few, Susanne Reber, Wendy-Ann Clarke et Bruce Edwards pour « Arachnid : Hunting the Web’s Darkest Secrets, » pour le Bureau de journalisme d’enquête, TVO Today, Piz Gloria Productions et le Toronto Star

Brendan Kennedy a révélé que des gardiens de prison avaient infligé des punitions brutales et injustifiées à près de 200 détenus du complexe correctionnel de Maplehurst, notamment lors d’une fouille à nu massive et violente. Le gouvernement de l’Ontario et le syndicat des agents correctionnels ont nié les faits et fait obstruction, mais Kennedy a découvert une vidéo qui confirmait que l’événement avait bel et bien eu lieu. Il a ensuite publié une série de reportages, chacun apportant de nouvelles révélations choquantes. Les responsables de l’établissement ont lancé une campagne pour dissimuler leurs actes, falsifiant des dossiers, détruisant des preuves potentielles et mentant aux enquêteurs. À ce jour, le ministère du Solliciteur général de l’Ontario refuse de transmettre aux Canadiens des informations sur ce qu’un juge a qualifié de « répugnant et grossier abus de pouvoir », un événement qui n’aurait jamais dû survenir au Canada.

Une enquête menée sur plusieurs années par the fifth estate de CBC a révélé que des pirates informatiques avaient infiltré les fichiers informatiques de l’Agence du revenu du Canada (ARC), volé l’identité de citoyens sans méfiance et trompé régulièrement l’ARC pour lui soutirer des centaines de millions de dollars en faux remboursements d’impôt. Au lieu d’enquêter adéquatement sur ce piratage, l’ARC a, pendant des années, continué d’exiger de ses victimes qu’elles remboursent les sommes volées, ruinant ainsi des vies. Par la suite, the fifth estate a découvert et signalé une autre violation liée au vol d’identité. Celle‑ci touchait 28 000 travailleurs du secteur médical dont les dossiers avaient été dérobés en 2009 à l’agence Interior Health (IH) de la Colombie‑Britannique et étaient toujours en vente sur le dark web. La province a nié le piratage, permettant ainsi à des fraudeurs d’identité de soutirer de l’argent à la fois à l’ARC et aux banques pendant plus d’une décennie. Les victimes en subissent encore les conséquences.

« Arachnid : Hunting the Web’s Darkest Secrets » est un balado en six épisodes qui examine les efforts déployés pour mettre fin au vaste commerce mondial en ligne de matériel d’exploitation sexuelle d’enfants. Une petite organisation sans but lucratif basée à Winnipeg, le Centre canadien de protection de l’enfance (C3P), a créé un outil gratuit d’exploration du Web capable de retracer rapidement et facilement la circulation de ces images horrifiques. Le seul obstacle demeure le refus des plateformes technologiques de l’utiliser. Le balado transporte les auditeurs aux quatre coins du monde, mettant en lumière l’ampleur du problème, les manquements moraux, juridiques et éthiques qui ont permis sa perpétuation, ainsi que le traumatisme incessant infligé aux victimes les plus vulnérables de notre société.

« Les lauréats des Prix Hillman de cette année nous rappellent que le journalisme courageux est la pierre angulaire de la démocratie », a déclaré Alex Dagg, membre du conseil de la Fondation Sidney Hillman. « En mettant en lumière les injustices gouvernementales et en tenant les puissants responsables de leurs actions, ces journalistes ont défendu le droit du public à l’information. »

La Fondation Sidney Hillman célébrera les lauréats et les lauréates de 2026 le 9 avril à Toronto.

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La Fondation Sidney Hillman récompense l’excellence en journalisme au service du bien commun. Les Prix américains Hillman sont décernés chaque année depuis 1950, et les Prix canadiens Hillman depuis 2011.

Pour plus d’informations, veuillez communiquer avec : Alexandra Lescaze :  alex@hillmanfoundation.org

Sidney's Picks: Contractors Say Corey Lewandowski Demanded Bribes

The Best of the Week’s News

  • Department of Homeland Security (DHS) contractors said they were asked to pay Corey Lewandowski bribes, er, “success fees.” (NBC
     

  • The city of Social Circle, GA cut off water service to a proposed DHS mega-center because officials refused to disclose how the facility would be used. (CBS)
     

  • A judge ordered the Veterans Administration to reinstate the contract of its largest union, at least temporarily. (Military Times)
     

  • Floridians are being forced to deliver by caesarian section. One woman in labor had to beg a judge for the right to refuse the surgery.  (ProPublica)
     

  • Gamblers on Polymarket threatened the life of a journalist who refused to alter his reporting to secure their payouts. (WaPo)
     

  • Chinese AI workers endure working conditions close to slavery at the BYD in Brazil. (WaPo)

Sidney's Picks: Teen Mariachi Stars and a Nashville Journo Detained by ICE

Photo credit: 

José Luis Ramos Salinas, Creative Commons. 

The Best of the Week’s News

  • DHS pick Markwayne Mullin let a convicted felon hide a cache of illegal weapons at his plumbing supply business. (WaPo)
     

  • Trump’s mass deportation campaign ensnares teen mariachi stars and a Nashville journalist. (NYT, CNN)
     

  • Detainee says guards at an immigration detention center gambled on which inmates would die by suicide. (AP)
     

  • Independent journalist wins legal fight for body cam footage of DOGE raid on the US Institute of Peace. (RCFP)
     

  • Young women ditch the new right as young men flock to the antisemitic groyper movement. (NYMag, NYT)

Sidney's Picks: Police Brutality Cost NYC Taxpayers $117 Million Last Year

Photo credit: 

Peter MillerCreative Commons.

The Best of the Week’s News

  • NYC taxpayers had to pay more than $117 million in police misconduct payments last year. (Gothamist)

     

  • Press freedom is under threat worldwide. (NYT)
     

  • Nike is moving jobs to low-wage regions of Indonesia. (ProPublica)
     

  • A 56-year-old Haitian asylum-seeker died in ICE detention from an untreated tooth infection. (Tuscon.com)
     

  • Prosecutors fail to make a criminal case against Joe Biden for using an autopen to sign legislation. (NYT)

Sidney's Picks: The Death of Elite Accountability

The Best of the Week’s News

 

  • From the unitary executive to Jeffrey Epstein: The death of elite accountability (Atlantic)
     

  • The FBI raids the home of the superintendent of LA schools after with AI chatbot fiasco. (LAT)
     

  • Chicago ICE protesters keep winning in court. (CST)
     

  • The Trump tax cuts pushed Medicare closer to insolvency, slashing 12 years off the lifespan of Part A. (Fortune)
     

  • Volkswagen workers in Tennessee approve their first union contract. (NPR)
     

  • Pentagon and Anthropic face off over control of contracted AI technology as Anthropic demands assurances their tech won’t be used for mass surveillance or autonomous drone ops. (NYT)
     

  • Jeanine Pirro’s office refuses to press charges, but the Labor Secretary’s husband remains banned from the building after alleged sexual assaults on staffers. (WaPo)

Sidney's Picks: Supreme Court Strikes Down Trump's Tariffs

Photo credit: 

Ken FagerCreative Commons.

The Best of the Week’s News

  • The Supreme Court strikes down most of Trump’s tariffs by a vote of 6-3, no word on whether anyone is getting a refund. (AP)
     

  • Labor Secretary’s husband banned from the Department of Labor for allegedly sexually assaulting at least two women in the building. (NYT)
     

  • Despite Trump’s best efforts, union membership ticked up in 2025. (Prospect)
     

  • South Korea’s former president is sentenced to life in prison for attempting to overthrow the government and refusing to apologize. (Guardian)
     

  • Epstein Estate settles $35 million class action lawsuit to compensate victims. (NBC)
     

  • Bucks County Commissioners, Democrats and Republicans, unanimously oppose ICE warehouse prisons as unfit for human beings  

Sidney's Picks: "I have never felt so much fear"

Photo credit: 

Gage SkidmoreCreative Commons.

The Best of the Week’s News
 

  • A federal judge blocks Pete Hegseth’s attempt to discipline Sen. Mark Kelly for reminding troops of their obligation to refuse illegal orders, and a grand jury refuses to induct Kelly and five other legislators for their speech. (WaPo)
     

  • The academic fallout from the Epstein Files keeps getting weirder: OSU professor physically attacks journalist for asking too many questions. (NYT)
     

  • “I have never felt so much fear”: Kids in the Dilley immigrant detention center speak out. (NYT, ProPublica)
     

  • An Irishman and 20-year resident of Boston says he fears for his life after five months in U.S. immigration detention. (RTE 100)
     

  • DNI Director Tulsi Gabbard was placed on a TSA watchlist in 2024 because she took a trip sponsored by a pro-Kremlin businessman with ties to sanctioned oligarchs. (SpyTalk)
     

  • Censorship of student journalism is a threat to free speech. (E&P)

Sidney's Picks: The Real Reason ICE Wears Masks

Photo credit: 

Tony Webster, Washington, DCCreative Commons.

The Best of the Week’s News

  • Hillman prize-winner Adam Serwer on the real reason ICE agents wear masks. (Atlantic)
     

  • Why Pam Bondi is using the FACE Act to target Don Lemon and other journalists. (MS Now)
     

  • ICE is buying warehouses to build massive detention centers across the country. (WaPo)
     

  • Union leaders warn Gavin Newsom to regulate AI if he wants to be president. (CalMatters)
     

  • Jeffrey Epstein cultivated ties with Russians and sought to meet Vladimir Putin, files show. (WaPo)

Don Lemon Arrested for Covering MN Church Protest

Photo credit: 

Chad Davis, Minneapolis, Creative Commons.

The Best of the Week’s News
 

  • Federal agents arrest Don Lemon for covering a church protest in Minneapolis. (NYT)
     

  • Feds seize ballots from Fulton County to boost Trump’s outrageous 2020 election conspiracy theories. (Guardian, ABC
     

  • How a violent, warrantless ICE raid devastated a family. (MoJo)
     

  • Grok probed: Europe investigates Elon Musk’s revenge porn engine. (CNN)
     

  • Remembering the Challenger disaster, which claimed the lives of seven astronauts including beloved teacher and union leader Christa McAuliffe. (WaPo)
     

  • A MAGA billionaire bought TikTok, what does that mean for the culture?

Sidney's Picks: Anti-ICE General Strike Underway in Minneapolis

Photo credit: 

Chad Davis, Minneapolis, Creative Commons.

The Best of the Week’s News

  • ICE authorized agents to break into homes without a judicial warrant, secret memo shows. (AP)

     

  • General strike to oppose ICE is underway in Minneapolis. (TNR, MN Reformer)
     

  • Martin Luther King Jr’s son urges the Supreme Court to save the Voting Rights Act and our democracy. (NYT)
     

  • The Sistine Chapel of the New Deal may be destroyed. (WaPo)
     

  • Planned CDC-funded, Tuskegee-style vaccine study in Africa is called off.  (NYT)
     

  • Abortion bans are killing women with high-risk pregnancies. (ProPublica)

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