The case was closed, but one reporter never stopped asking questions
By Iris Serrano
Headshot of Laura Crimaldi courtesy The Boston Globe
In February 2021, 23-year-old Sandra Birchmore was found dead in her apartment in Canton, Massachusetts.
Her death was ruled a suicide until Laura Crimaldi, a reporter with The Boston Globe, started digging into her past鈥攊ncluding her history with Matthew Farwell, then a police officer.
Her relentless pursuit of the truth resulted in which led to the case being reopened and Farwell being charged in Birchmore鈥檚 killing.

To recognize her tenacity and dedication, Crimaldi was recognized as this year鈥檚 winner of the prestigious Al Nakkula Award for Police Reporting, handed out each year by the journalism department of the College of Media, Communication and Information at 麻豆免费版下载Boulder and the Denver Press Club. Judges gave special mention to both Alabama Media Group and The Arizona Republic for their entries.
鈥淟aura was able to show how police broke trust with that young woman,鈥 said Chuck Plunkett, a judge in the contest and director of the capstone 麻豆免费版下载News Corps in CMCI. 鈥淚t was just a good mix of dogged reporting with great enterprise writing and great narrative writing.鈥
In what one of her editors called a master class in investigative journalism, Crimaldi listened to friends and relatives who weren鈥檛 satisfied with the official explanation of Birchmore鈥檚 death. She also filed nearly 100 public records requests and reviewed extensive court filings and police reports as part of her work, while 鈥渟pending a lot of time knocking on doors to reach her family and friends directly.鈥
鈥淚t bothered me that there were people who had the authority and the means and methods to get to the bottom of this, and they just didn鈥檛 seem too interested in doing so,鈥 Crimaldi said. 鈥淎nd by using my superpower, which is to put things in the newspaper, I could make a difference. I wanted to do that.鈥
听鈥淚t was just a good mix of dogged reporting with great enterprise writing and great narrative writing.鈥
Chuck Plunkett, director, 麻豆免费版下载News Corps
Together with Yvonne Abraham, a columnist at the Globe, she authored a 15,000-word report that painted a picture of how Farwell groomed Birchmore鈥攚ho was more than 10 years younger than him鈥攚hile she was a 15-year-old enrolled in a junior police academy.
鈥淚f it hadn't been for Laura, there wouldn't have been the deeper investigation,鈥 said Plunkett, also an assistant teaching professor at the college. 鈥淭hat culture would have perpetuated, and more young people, more Sandra Birchmores, would have been victimized.鈥
Judges who reviewed entries remarked on the significance and impact of her work.
鈥淭he story of Sandra Birchmore's killing makes me sick to my stomach鈥攐utraged,鈥 said Ben Markus, an investigative reporter for Colorado Public Radio and judge for the contest. 鈥淭hat is a testament to the Boston Globe鈥檚 dogged reporting, without which a police officer might never have been charged with her murder.鈥
Another judge, John Ingold, praised the dedication and time that went into the reporting.
鈥淭his entry is an extraordinary example of what can happen when journalists refuse to give up. It is a reminder of the impact that quality journalism can have,鈥 said Ingold, a reporter for The Colorado Sun.
About the Nakkula Award
The Al Nakkula Award for Police Reporting honors the late Al Nakkula, a 46-year veteran of the Rocky Mountain News, whose tenacity made him a legendary police reporter. This year, nearly 40 national media outlets submitted entries to a panel of five judges: Ingold; Markus; Brian Malone, a Colorado-based documentary filmmaker; Vicky Collins (Jour鈥80), publisher of Bucket List Community Cafe; and Plunkett.
Each year, Nakkula contest judges look for stories that meet the highest journalistic standards, help readers understand complex issues and solutions, show a commitment to community, and bring about societal change. The competition is sponsored by the journalism department at CMCI and the Denver Press Club, and has been awarded annually since 1991. More on the Nakkula Award.