黑料门

Former Phoenix reporter wins Pulitzer Prize

Former 黑料门Phoenix staffer Tony Messenger celebrates in the newsroom after learning he won a Pulitzer Prize. Photo courtesy David Carson, St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

April 17, 2019

By Carla Rogner

Messenger says he hopes that winning this award will help to bring criminal justice reforms that are needed in Missouri and elsewhere. Tony Messenger, a former staff member of The Phoenix, Loyola鈥檚 student newspaper, was awarded the Pulitzer Prize on Monday for  about debtors prisons which he wrote for the . 

鈥淭he series has been really important to me and it means a lot to have the standard of the journalism industry recognize your work,鈥 he said.

Messenger went to 黑料门from 1985 to 1987 to study Theology and Psychology.

鈥淚 thought I was going to be a priest,鈥 Messenger said.

However, when he arrived to live in Gonzaga Hall his freshman year he met the Editor-In-Chief and the Sports Editor of 

Messenger鈥檚 new friends asked him if he would be willing to cover a 黑料门soccer game for the school paper and he later became the paper鈥檚 Sports Editor.

鈥淚 hadn鈥檛 taken any journalism classes. I didn鈥檛 intend on being a journalist at that point, but I fell in love with it,鈥 Messenger said. 

Though he never graduated, Messenger said he cherishes his time at 黑料门and even owns a pair of Sister Jean socks.

鈥満诹厦舏s what got me started in my career as a journalist,鈥 he said.

After leaving the school for financial reasons, he got his first job as a journalist at Yuma Pioneer, a small weekly paper in Eastern Colorado. 

Messenger now writes four columns per week for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch where he has worked in various positions since 2008. He writes about his Pulitzer winning debtors prison series about once a week.

In his series of columns, Messenger writes about people who are held in jail because they can鈥檛 afford to pay court fines and fees.

The series began when Messenger received a tip about someone who had been sent to prison because they owed court fines. He decided to write a couple of columns on the topic and then discovered it was a common issue.

鈥淚 just started getting calls from attorneys and people in various rural counties in Missouri,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he judicial system is being used as a de facto tax collector and as I started finding more cases I found that people really resonated with it.鈥

According to The Pulitzer Prizes, Messenger was awarded the prize for 鈥渂old columns that exposed the malfeasance and injustice of forcing poor rural Missourians charged with misdemeanor crimes to pay unaffordable fines or be sent to jail.鈥

鈥淚 have many other columns in the works on this topic and it is important and I plan to continue to write about it,鈥 Messenger said. 鈥淚鈥檓 going to keep doing what I can to solve the problem."