Investigative journalist St. Amant to headline TIPA 2025

Author, podcaster and Baylor alumna Claire St. Amant explains her story to the audience during her conversation and signing event on Monday night at Fabled Bookshop & Cafe in Waco. Mary Thurmond | Lariat Photo Editor

Investigative journalist Claire St. Amant developed and produced crime stories for CBS News for nearly a decade. She is credited on over 20 episodes of 48 Hours, including an assassination attempt on a judge in Austin, a cold case kidnapping in Colorado, and a murder-for-hire sting on two doctors in Houston. In 2019, St. Amant began contributing to 60 Minutes with “The Ranger and the Serial Killer.”

She built her unconventional career one story at a time, rising up through local media to national television and her own network podcast, Final Days on Earth with Claire St. Amant.

Currently, St. Amant is the Lillian and Rupert Radford Distinguished Visiting Professor in Journalism at Baylor University, where she is teaching an original course on podcasting.

St. Amant’s debut memoir was released in February from BenBella Books and distributed by Simon & Schuster. “Killer Story: The Truth Behind True Crime Television” is an inside account of what to takes to succeed in the ruthless, knives-out world of true crime TV. Read The Baylor Lariat’s coverage of her Feb. 17 book release event in Waco.

A returned Peace Corps Volunteer with eclectic tastes, she is always on the hunt for her next adventure.

(Photo on homepage republished with permission from The Wacoan.)

TIPA joins push for Biden to demand reporters’ release

The Texas Intercollegiate Press Association has joined 25 other journalism organizations in demanding President Biden obtain the release of two U.S. journalists detained abroad: Austin Tice, taken in Syria 10.5 years ago, and Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, who was imprisoned last month in Russia on espionage charges. Moscow denied Gershkovich bail Tuesday and ordered him held until trial, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Tice was last seen in a brief YouTube video released in September 2022, NPR reported in August.

The National Press Club and National Press Club Journalism Institute’s letter — cosigned by TIPA, College Media Association, Associated Collegiate Press and the Student Press Law Center, among other professional groups — called on the Biden administration to prioritize the problem of hostage-taking of journalists by state actors.

Incoming TIPA president Nicole Morris said the organization decries the taking of journalists as hostages by foreign powers.

“Such atrocities are an attempt to silence journalists whose work brings to light injustices around the world,” Morris said. “The U.S. should work quickly to not only denounce these actions by foreign countries but to quickly seek the freedom of Austin Tice and Evan Gershkovich.”

The open letter said in addition to silencing journalists’ stories, hostage-takers often use journalists as leverage in negotiations.

“Both are atrocious and in violation of international protocols,” the letter states. “Of course, these entities could require the journalist to leave the country but choose to take them hostage instead. When this happens, they succeed in harming and destabilizing countries like the United States, where democracy requires the free flow of information.

Below is the full text of the letter.

President Joseph R. Biden
The White House
Washington, D.C. 20500

Dear President Biden:

We call upon you to immediately prioritize the release of two U.S. journalists being held hostage abroad: Austin Tice, who was taken in Syria 10.5 years ago, and Evan Gershkovich, who was imprisoned by Russian security forces two weeks ago. Journalism is not a crime and should not be punished.

We also ask you and your administration to prioritize addressing any unjust detention of journalists by foreign powers. Often this action is taken to both silence the important work the journalist is doing, and to use the journalist as leverage in a negotiation. Both are atrocious and in violation of international protocols. Of course, these entities could require the journalist to leave the country but choose to take them hostage instead. When this happens, they succeed in harming and destabilizing countries like the United States, where democracy requires the free flow of information.

When a U.S. passport holder, who is a working, credentialed journalist is taken prisoner, the USG should immediately declare this a wrongful detention. We note that in the recent case of Evan Gershkovich, it took the State Department 13 days to declare his case a “wrongful detention.” While he waited for the designation to be declared, Evan was in solitary confinement. According to the United Nations Torture Convention, solitary confinement for 15 days or more is torture. Some studies indicate irreversible brain damage can occur from periods of solitary confinement of more than 20 days. These early days are a critical time for hostages. Our government’s internal process must be streamlined as foreign entities can use our slow bureaucracy to punish journalists.

The State Department suggests that while they follow their process toward a wrongful detention designation, the detainee will have access to consular visits. But with Evan, that was not done. The Russian government allowed no consular visits in violation of treaties. It was a week before Evan was able to see his lawyer. It was the prohibition of consular visits that makes the solitary so punitive. Meanwhile, during this time the Russian propaganda spread unchecked, false charges were spread through the media. It is vital that US designation of wrongful detention be part of these early news cycles to refute the spread of disinformation and to protect the journalist.

We urge you to act now to obtain the release of unjustly detained journalists, Austin Tice and Evan Gershkovich, and to prioritize any cases of hostage taking of journalists by state actors.

Sincerely,
National Press Club
National Press Club Journalism Institute
Reporters Without Borders (RSF)
National Association of Broadcasters (NAB)
News/Media Alliance
Online News Association
International Women’s Media Foundation
American Society of Journalists and Authors (ASJA)
Washington Association of Black Journalists
Dow Jones News Fund
International Center for Journalists
National Press Photographers Association (NPPA)
National Scholastic Press Association
Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ)
Radio and Television News Association of Southern California (RTNA)
Report for America
Report for the World
Texas Intercollegiate Press Association
Student Press Law Center
The GroundTruth Project
Associated Collegiate Press
News Leaders Association
College Media Association
Investigative Reporters & Editors
National Association of Hispanic Journalists
The Journalism and Women’s Symposium