International Consortium Of Investigative Journalists Inc is located in Washington, DC. The organization was established in 2017. According to its NTEE Classification (Q20) the organization is classified as: Promotion of International Understanding, under the broad grouping of International, Foreign Affairs & National Security and related organizations. As of 12/2020, International Consortium Of Investigative Journalists Inc employed 18 individuals. This organization is an independent organization and not affiliated with a larger national or regional group of organizations. International Consortium Of Investigative Journalists Inc is a 501(c)(3) and as such, is described as a "Charitable or Religous organization or a private foundation" by the IRS.
For the year ending 12/2020, International Consortium Of Investigative Journalists Inc generated $3.0m in total revenue. This represents a relatively dramatic decline in revenue. Over the past 4 years, the organization has seen revenues fall by an average of (18.9%) each year. All expenses for the organization totaled $4.7m during the year ending 12/2020. You can explore the organizations financials more deeply in the financial statements section below.
Form
990
Mission & Program ActivityExcerpts From the 990 Filing
TAX YEAR
2020
Describe the Organization's Mission:
Part 3 - Line 1
THE PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION OF INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST, UNCOVERING CORRUPTION AND ABUSES OF THE PUBLIC TRUST THROUGH A GLOBAL NETWORK OF INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISTS WHO COLLABORATE ON PROJECTS THAT DRIVE SOCIAL CHANGE, EMBOLDENING GLOBAL INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM AS A SECTOR BY BRINGING TOGETHER THE WORLD'S LEADING INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISTS AND MEDIA OUTLETS AND FOSTERING COLLABORATION ON PROJECTS OF GLOBAL IMPORTANCE.
Describe the Organization's Program Activity:
Part 3 - Line 4a
EDITORIAL - HISTORICALLY, ICIJ AND ITS PARTNERS WERE AWARDED A PULITZER PRIZE FOR THE PANAMA PAPERS PROJECT, IT SPARKED INVESTIGATIONS AND DEBATE AROUND THE WORLD. IT WAS A SERIES OF INTERNATIONAL PARTNERSHIPS SPEARHEADED BY ICIJ THAT HAVE HELPED REDEFINE JOURNALISM IN THE 21ST CENTURY.WE ARE NOW ESTABLISHED AS THE HUB OF A POWERFUL GLOBAL NETWORK OF MEDIA ORGANIZATIONS. ICIJ HAS A NETWORK OF 267 INVESTIGATIVE REPORTERS FROM 100 DIFFERENT COUNTRIES. ICIJ ALSO PARTNERS WITH MORE THAN 100 MEDIA ORGANIZATIONS INCLUDING THE BBC, THE NEW YORK TIMES, THE GUARDIAN, ASAHI SHIMBUN AND OTHER SMALLER NOT FOR PROFITS. THEIR JOURNALISTS WORK COLLABORATIVELY WITH ICIJ TO EXPOSE ISSUES OF GLOBAL IMPORTANCE AND BRING CHANGE ON A WORLDWIDE SCALE. WE WORK IN THE BELIEF THAT INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM PLAYS AN INDISPENSABLE ROLE IN DEMOCRACY. IT HOLDS POWER TO ACCOUNT. IT GIVES VOICE TO THE VOICELESS. IT CHALLENGES THE WAY PEOPLE SEE AND UNDERSTAND THE WORLD AROUND THEM AND, IN DOING SO, HELPS TO GENERATE BADLY NEEDED REFORM. IN 2020 ICIJ'S LUANDA LEAKS INVESTIGATION REVEALED THE REAL STORY OF ISABEL DOS SANTOS, DAUGHTER OF ANGOLA'S FORMER PRESIDENT, HAD BECOME AFRICA'S RICHEST WOMAN. ICIJ FOUND THAT DOS SANTOS HAD MOVED HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS IN PUBLIC MONEY OUT OF ANGOLA AND INTO A LABYRINTH COMPANIES AND SUBSIDIARIES, MANY OF THEM IN OFFSHORE SECRECY JURISDICTIONS. THE FALLOUT OF LUANDA LEAKS WAS IMMEDIATE AND ENORMOUS. A LUANDA COURT ORDERED A FREEZE OF HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS OF DOS SANTOS' ASSETS. THE COURT DECLARED THAT DOS SANTOS AND HER ASSOCIATES HAD CAUSED ANGOLA TO LOSE MORE THAN $1 BILLION.THE FINCEN FILES REVEALED THE ROLE PLAYED BY GLOBAL BANKS IN INDUSTRIAL SCALE MONEY LAUNDERING. THE INVESTIGATION FOUND THAT BETWEEN 1999 AND 2017, MAJOR BANKS INCLUDING JPMORGAN CHASE, DEUTSCHE BANK, HSBC AND OTHERS - MOVED MORE THAN $2 TRILLION THEY SUSPECTED WAS LINKED TO CORRUPT OFFICIALS, DRUG CARTELS, ARMS TRAFFICKERS AND OTHER INTERNATIONAL CRIMINALS, WHILE THE U.S. GOVERNMENT FAILED TO STOP IT. THE BANKS REPORTED THESE TRANSACTIONS BUT TOO LATE FOR U.S. AUTHORITIES TO STOP THEM.
DIGITAL DATA - REPORTERS IN OUR PROJECTS BELONG TO NEWSROOMS FROM MORE THAN 100 COUNTRIES. THEY SPEAK MANY LANGUAGES AND HAVE A VARIED RANGE OF SKILLS. TECHNOLOGY AIDS ICIJ TO OVERCOME THE CHALLENGING TASK OF ENCOURAGING THIS DIVERSE GROUP TO WORK TOGETHER AND, WHEN NECESSARY, IT ALLOWS THEM TO SIFT THROUGH MILLIONS OF CLOUD-BASED DOCUMENTS LOOKING FOR STORY LEADS. OVER THE PAST THREE YEARS, OUR DATA & RESEARCH UNIT HAS DEVELOPED A UNIQUE STACK OF SOFTWARE AND TOOLS THAT ARE PROVIDED AS SERVICES TO OUR MEDIA PARTNERS AND FACILITATE THIS REMOTE WORK. DATASHARE IS FREE, OPEN-SOURCE AND MADE AVAILABLE BY ICIJ INC.
EDITORIAL - HISTORICALLY, ICIJ AND ITS PARTNERS WERE AWARDED A PULITZER PRIZE FOR THE PANAMA PAPERS PROJECT, IT SPARKED INVESTIGATIONS AND DEBATE AROUND THE WORLD. IT WAS A SERIES OF INTERNATIONAL PARTNERSHIPS SPEARHEADED BY ICIJ THAT HAVE HELPED REDEFINE JOURNALISM IN THE 21ST CENTURY.WE ARE NOW ESTABLISHED AS THE HUB OF A POWERFUL GLOBAL NETWORK OF MEDIA ORGANIZATIONS. ICIJ HAS A NETWORK OF 267 INVESTIGATIVE REPORTERS FROM 100 DIFFERENT COUNTRIES. ICIJ ALSO PARTNERS WITH MORE THAN 100 MEDIA ORGANIZATIONS INCLUDING THE BBC, THE NEW YORK TIMES, THE GUARDIAN, ASAHI SHIMBUN AND OTHER SMALLER NOT FOR PROFITS. THEIR JOURNALISTS WORK COLLABORATIVELY WITH ICIJ TO EXPOSE ISSUES OF GLOBAL IMPORTANCE AND BRING CHANGE ON A WORLDWIDE SCALE. WE WORK IN THE BELIEF THAT INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM PLAYS AN INDISPENSABLE ROLE IN DEMOCRACY. IT HOLDS POWER TO ACCOUNT. IT GIVES VOICE TO THE VOICELESS. IT CHALLENGES THE WAY PEOPLE SEE AND UNDERSTAND THE WORLD AROUND THEM AND, IN DOING SO, HELPS TO GENERATE BADLY NEEDED REFORM. IN 2020 ICIJ'S LUANDA LEAKS INVESTIGATION REVEALED THE REAL STORY OF ISABEL DOS SANTOS, DAUGHTER OF ANGOLA'S FORMER PRESIDENT, HAD BECOME AFRICA'S RICHEST WOMAN. ICIJ FOUND THAT DOS SANTOS HAD MOVED HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS IN PUBLIC MONEY OUT OF ANGOLA AND INTO A LABYRINTH COMPANIES AND SUBSIDIARIES, MANY OF THEM IN OFFSHORE SECRECY JURISDICTIONS. THE FALLOUT OF LUANDA LEAKS WAS IMMEDIATE AND ENORMOUS. A LUANDA COURT ORDERED A FREEZE OF HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS OF DOS SANTOS' ASSETS. THE COURT DECLARED THAT DOS SANTOS AND HER ASSOCIATES HAD CAUSED ANGOLA TO LOSE MORE THAN $1 BILLION.THE FINCEN FILES REVEALED THE ROLE PLAYED BY GLOBAL BANKS IN INDUSTRIAL SCALE MONEY LAUNDERING. THE INVESTIGATION FOUND THAT BETWEEN 1999 AND 2017, MAJOR BANKS INCLUDING JPMORGAN CHASE, DEUTSCHE BANK, HSBC AND OTHERS - MOVED MORE THAN $2 TRILLION THEY SUSPECTED WAS LINKED TO CORRUPT OFFICIALS, DRUG CARTELS, ARMS TRAFFICKERS AND OTHER INTERNATIONAL CRIMINALS, WHILE THE U.S. GOVERNMENT FAILED TO STOP IT. THE BANKS REPORTED THESE TRANSACTIONS BUT TOO LATE FOR U.S. AUTHORITIES TO STOP THEM.
DIGITAL DATA - REPORTERS IN OUR PROJECTS BELONG TO NEWSROOMS FROM MORE THAN 100 COUNTRIES. THEY SPEAK MANY LANGUAGES AND HAVE A VARIED RANGE OF SKILLS. TECHNOLOGY AIDS ICIJ TO OVERCOME THE CHALLENGING TASK OF ENCOURAGING THIS DIVERSE GROUP TO WORK TOGETHER AND, WHEN NECESSARY, IT ALLOWS THEM TO SIFT THROUGH MILLIONS OF CLOUD-BASED DOCUMENTS LOOKING FOR STORY LEADS. OVER THE PAST THREE YEARS, OUR DATA & RESEARCH UNIT HAS DEVELOPED A UNIQUE STACK OF SOFTWARE AND TOOLS THAT ARE PROVIDED AS SERVICES TO OUR MEDIA PARTNERS AND FACILITATE THIS REMOTE WORK. DATASHARE IS FREE, OPEN-SOURCE AND MADE AVAILABLE BY ICIJ INC.
Name (title) | Role | Hours | Compensation |
---|---|---|---|
Gerard Ryle Executive Director | Officer | 40 | $245,000 |
Gordon Dunlop Chief Financial Officer | Officer | 40 | $140,000 |
Fergus Shiel Project Manager | 40 | $131,992 | |
Benjamin Hallman Chief Reporter | 40 | $121,383 | |
Michael Hudson Senior Editor | 40 | $120,701 | |
Agustin Armendariz Senior Data Reporter | 40 | $110,060 |
Vendor Name (Service) | Service Year | Compensation |
---|---|---|
Gordon Dunlop Chief Financial Officer | 12/30/18 | $140,000 |
Gerard Ryle Executive Director | 12/30/18 | $210,000 |
Statement of Revenue | |
---|---|
Federated campaigns | $0 |
Membership dues | $0 |
Fundraising events | $0 |
Related organizations | $0 |
Government grants | $0 |
All other contributions, gifts, grants, and similar amounts not included above | $2,994,964 |
Noncash contributions included in lines 1a–1f | $0 |
Total Revenue from Contributions, Gifts, Grants & Similar | $2,994,964 |
Total Program Service Revenue | $0 |
Investment income | $27,391 |
Tax Exempt Bond Proceeds | $0 |
Royalties | $0 |
Net Rental Income | $0 |
Net Gain/Loss on Asset Sales | $0 |
Net Income from Fundraising Events | $0 |
Net Income from Gaming Activities | $0 |
Net Income from Sales of Inventory | $0 |
Miscellaneous Revenue | $0 |
Total Revenue | $3,022,355 |
Statement of Expenses | |
---|---|
Grants and other assistance to domestic organizations and domestic governments. | $0 |
Grants and other assistance to domestic individuals. | $0 |
Grants and other assistance to Foreign Orgs/Individuals | $0 |
Benefits paid to or for members | $0 |
Compensation of current officers, directors, key employees. | $485,000 |
Compensation of current officers, directors, key employees. | $164,500 |
Compensation to disqualified persons | $0 |
Other salaries and wages | $1,562,558 |
Pension plan accruals and contributions | $53,368 |
Other employee benefits | $187,886 |
Payroll taxes | $130,185 |
Fees for services: Management | $0 |
Fees for services: Legal | $41,123 |
Fees for services: Accounting | $96,417 |
Fees for services: Lobbying | $0 |
Fees for services: Fundraising | $60,000 |
Fees for services: Investment Management | $180 |
Fees for services: Other | $1,447,899 |
Advertising and promotion | $8,181 |
Office expenses | $7,646 |
Information technology | $231,027 |
Royalties | $0 |
Occupancy | $143,876 |
Travel | $78,269 |
Payments of travel or entertainment expenses for any federal, state, or local public officials | $0 |
Conferences, conventions, and meetings | $0 |
Interest | $1,782 |
Payments to affiliates | $0 |
Depreciation, depletion, and amortization | $35,336 |
Insurance | $47,693 |
All other expenses | $47,068 |
Total functional expenses | $4,716,831 |
Balance Sheet | |
---|---|
Cash—non-interest-bearing | $1,291,365 |
Savings and temporary cash investments | $0 |
Pledges and grants receivable | $1,589,516 |
Accounts receivable, net | $0 |
Loans from Officers, Directors, or Controlling Persons | $0 |
Loans from Disqualified Persons | $0 |
Notes and loans receivable | $0 |
Inventories for sale or use | $0 |
Prepaid expenses and deferred charges | $41,433 |
Net Land, buildings, and equipment | $56,761 |
Investments—publicly traded securities | $0 |
Investments—other securities | $4,479,707 |
Investments—program-related | $0 |
Intangible assets | $0 |
Other assets | $21,111 |
Total assets | $7,479,893 |
Accounts payable and accrued expenses | $81,027 |
Grants payable | $0 |
Deferred revenue | $0 |
Tax-exempt bond liabilities | $0 |
Escrow or custodial account liability | $0 |
Loans and other payables to any current Officer, Director, or Controlling Person | $0 |
Secured mortgages and notes payable | $0 |
Unsecured mortgages and notes payable | $0 |
Other liabilities | $329,359 |
Total liabilities | $410,386 |
Net assets without donor restrictions | $4,301,758 |
Net assets with donor restrictions | $2,767,749 |
Capital stock or trust principal, or current funds | $0 |
Paid-in or capital surplus, or land, building, or equipment fund | $0 |
Retained earnings, endowment, accumulated income, or other funds | $0 |
Total liabilities and net assets/fund balances | $7,479,893 |
Over the last fiscal year, we have identified 1 grants that International Consortium Of Investigative Journalists Inc has recieved totaling $6,000.
Awarding Organization | Amount |
---|---|
Stearns Charitable Trust Boston, MA PURPOSE: PROGRAM SUPPORT | $6,000 |
Organization Name | Assets | Revenue |
---|---|---|
Institute For Governance And Sustainable Development Inc Washington, DC | $3,406,420 | $7,176,788 |
Middle East Media And Research Institute Inc Washington, DC | $4,612,496 | $9,235,135 |
International Consortium Of Investigative Journalists Inc Washington, DC | $7,479,893 | $3,022,355 |
Israel Institute Inc Washington, DC | $4,523,703 | $683,865 |
U S Assoc For Intl Migration Washington, DC | $429,111 | $3,312,005 |
Us-Japan Council Washington, DC | $22,364,092 | $5,169,884 |
Global Integrity Washington, DC | $7,351,662 | $3,173,199 |
Ecopeace Middle East Environmental Ngo Forum Washington, DC | $4,125,251 | $2,987,389 |
National Peace Corps Association Washington, DC | $3,770,682 | $2,874,341 |
The 1890 Universities Foundation Washington, DC | $3,141,528 | $4,571,927 |
Arabia Foundation Washington, DC | $38,126 | $1,600,280 |
Technology Policy Institute Washington, DC | $925,196 | $1,497,340 |