Bloomberg Industry Group
Reporter, Senior (INDG) - Supreme Court
Bloomberg Industry Group, Washington, District Of Columbia, United States, 20310
US Supreme Court Coverage
You will aggressively cover the US Supreme Court. You will write engaging, impactful stories that break down complex legal issues and court trends clearly, accurately, and in a way that makes readers take notice. What You Will Do:
Produce stories with compelling leads, nut graphs, solid framing, and diverse sourcing that can be published with minimal editing Break exclusives, while cultivating sources, developing story ideas, and conducting probing interviews Leverage in-depth knowledge of federal and state legislative, regulatory, and judicial processes Collaborate with colleagues on topic, multimedia, and graphics teams as well as work independently Serve as a subject-matter expert and resource for more junior reporters throughout the newsroom You Need To Have:
Bachelor's degree with coursework in English or journalism preferred 7 years' experience in journalism, including at least one year reporting on legal subject matter Equal Opportunity Bloomberg Industry Group maintains a continuing policy of non-discrimination in employment. It is Bloomberg Industry Group's policy to provide equal opportunity and access for all persons, and the Company is committed to attracting, retaining, developing, and promoting the most qualified individuals without regard to age, ancestry, color, gender identity or expression, genetic predisposition or carrier status, marital status, national or ethnic origin, race, religion or belief, sex, sexual orientation, sexual and other reproductive health decisions, parental or caring status, physical or mental disability, pregnancy or maternity/parental leave, protected veteran status, status as a victim of domestic violence, or any other classification protected by applicable law ("Protected Characteristic"). Bloomberg prohibits treating applicants or employees less favorably in connection with the terms and conditions of employment, in all phases of the employment process, because of one or more Protected Characteristics ("Discrimination").
You will aggressively cover the US Supreme Court. You will write engaging, impactful stories that break down complex legal issues and court trends clearly, accurately, and in a way that makes readers take notice. What You Will Do:
Produce stories with compelling leads, nut graphs, solid framing, and diverse sourcing that can be published with minimal editing Break exclusives, while cultivating sources, developing story ideas, and conducting probing interviews Leverage in-depth knowledge of federal and state legislative, regulatory, and judicial processes Collaborate with colleagues on topic, multimedia, and graphics teams as well as work independently Serve as a subject-matter expert and resource for more junior reporters throughout the newsroom You Need To Have:
Bachelor's degree with coursework in English or journalism preferred 7 years' experience in journalism, including at least one year reporting on legal subject matter Equal Opportunity Bloomberg Industry Group maintains a continuing policy of non-discrimination in employment. It is Bloomberg Industry Group's policy to provide equal opportunity and access for all persons, and the Company is committed to attracting, retaining, developing, and promoting the most qualified individuals without regard to age, ancestry, color, gender identity or expression, genetic predisposition or carrier status, marital status, national or ethnic origin, race, religion or belief, sex, sexual orientation, sexual and other reproductive health decisions, parental or caring status, physical or mental disability, pregnancy or maternity/parental leave, protected veteran status, status as a victim of domestic violence, or any other classification protected by applicable law ("Protected Characteristic"). Bloomberg prohibits treating applicants or employees less favorably in connection with the terms and conditions of employment, in all phases of the employment process, because of one or more Protected Characteristics ("Discrimination").