Scott Higham is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter for The Washington Post. During the past five years, he has been investigating the forces behind the opioid epidemic and was a lead reporter on The Post's ""Opioid Files"" series, which was a Pulitzer Finalist for Public Service in 2020. His work, in collaboration with some of the best reporters, producers and editors in the business, also has been recognized with a George Polk award, a Peabody, an Emmy, the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award, the Edward R. Murrow Award and the Alfred I. duPont-Columbia Award. Sari Horwitz has been a reporter at?The Washington Post?for 38 years and has been awarded the Pulitzer Prize four times. She was a reporter on the Post's ""Opioid Files"" series, which was a Pulitzer Finalist for Public Service in 2020. Horwitz is the co-author Finding Chandra and Sniper and the author of Justice in Indian Country. Her work has been recognized with a George Polk award, the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award, the Selden Ring for Investigative Reporting, the James Aronson Award for Social Justice Journalism and the American Society of News Editors Distinguished Writing award.
An eye-opening, shocking and deeply documented investigation of the opioid crisis by two great reporters. This is not just about the greed of the pharmaceutical companies. AMERICAN CARTEL exposes the sweeping moral corruption of some senior officials in the Department of Justice, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Congress, and the practice of medicine and law. The ultimate corruption is the collective failure to see, define and act on the larger public interest to address a true national emergency. --Bob Woodward, Associate Editor of The Washington Post and bestselling author of PERIL A story of courageous heroes fighting the opioid crisis, AMERICAN CARTEL reads like a thriller. At the same time, it is a vivisection of the political and corporate corruption that allows pharmaceutical firms to profit from despair. AC follows a group of modern-day private eyes as they investigate players much bigger than the Sacklers, including some of America's biggest companies and most powerful members of Congress. Like a riveting true crime story, AC follows the money through the revolving doors of Washington, into the swamp of lobbyists and white collar drug rings who recklessly peddle narcotics for billions of dollars as hundreds of thousands of Americans die of overdoses. --Alex Gibney, Academy award-winning filmmaker and director of THE CRIME OF THE CENTURY Scott Higham and Sari Horwitz are two of the most tenacious investigative reporters in journalism. For years they dug into America's opioid epidemic, unearthing a pattern of callousness and recklessness within the drug industry. With a fast-paced and absorbing narrative, and dismaying documentary evidence, they recount how powerful interests abetted widespread addiction and abuse - and how a few determined individuals fought for years to finally hold them to account. --Marty Baron, Executive Editor (Retired) The Washington Post