2025 Dart Award Finalists Announced

Since 1994, the Dart Awards for Excellence in Coverage of Trauma have recognized exemplary journalism on the impact of violence, crime and other traumatic events on individuals, families and communities. Spotlighting the experiences of victims and survivors, Dart Award honorees make significant contributions to public understanding of trauma-related issues. The 2025 Dart Award finalists include some of the world’s best-known news organizations as well as small community outlets.

The finalists for this year's Dart Awards for Excellence in Coverage of Trauma are:

Al Jazeera Fault Lines, "All That Remains"; The Baltimore Banner, "Baltimore's Overdose Crisis"The Baltimore Banner, "Uncovering abuse at Greater Grace Church"Bloomberg Businessweek, "Unsafe Online"The Marshall Project, "The Hardest Case for Mercy"NBC News Studios, "The Sing Sing Chronicles"; The New York Times Magazine, "The Long Road from Xinjiang"The New Yorker, “You Won’t Get Free of It”; The Philadelphia Inquirer, "The Wrong Man"Serial and The New York Times, "The Two Ledgers"; USA Today, "Untested"; The Washington Post, "Abused by the Badge".

Click below to read, watch and listen to selections from the 2025 Dart Award finalists.

Al Jazeera Fault Lines, "All That Remains"
The Baltimore Banner, "Baltimore's Overdose Crisis"

How Baltimore became the U.S. overdose capital​.
 

The Baltimore Banner, "Uncovering abuse at Greater Grace Church"

This megachurch warned of hell. Then it concealed its own sins.
 

Bloomberg Businessweek, "Unsafe Online"

Scammers are targeting teenage boys on social media—and driving some to suicide.
 

The Marshall Project, "The Hardest Case for Mercy"

Inside the effort to spare the Parkland shooter.
 

NBC News Studios, "The Sing Sing Chronicles"

The story of a journalist and a man convicted of murder who helped overturn convictions in five homicide cases and free six innocent men.
 

The New York Times Magazine, "The Long Road from Xinjiang"

He fled brutal repression—only to discover, as so many Uyghur refugees have, that China’s power stretches far beyond its borders.
 

The New Yorker, “You Won’t Get Free of It”

The celebrated writer’s partner sexually abused her daughter Andrea. The abuse transformed Munro’s fiction, but she left it to Andrea to confront the true story.
 

The Philadelphia Inquirer, "The Wrong Man"

A story of deception and redemption: The high-profile murder of a 5-year-old boy—and his mother’s quest to free his convicted killer.
 

Serial and The New York Times, "The Two Ledgers"

Majid Khan was locked away at C.I.A. black sites for years. What could he tell the world?
 

USA Today, "Untested"

A Michigan sexual assault case gets a spark from DNA evidence 800 miles away​.
 

The Washington Post, "Abused by the Badge"

A police officer took a teen for a rape kit. Then he assaulted her, too.