They brought you the biggest scoops, now Mail journalists scoop awards

They brought you the biggest scoops… now Mail journalists scoop top Press awards

The Mail’s outstanding journalism has been recognised once again with a host of triumphs across a broad range of categories at this year’s London Press Club awards.

Of the ten prizes up for grabs, Mail journalists enjoyed staggering success by taking four of the awards, including some of the most prestigious gongs.

Stephen Wright was named Journalist of the Year for a series of fearless and jaw-dropping scoops exposing Albanian drug barons and previously unknown details about the disappearance of Lord Lucan. 

Judges said he had ‘a vintage year with stand-out investigations’.

Northern Corres-pondent Liz Hull (left) and Caroline Cheetham’s (right) acclaimed podcast series, The Trial of Lucy Letby, earned them the Multi-media Journalist of the Year award

Katie Hind (pictured) took the coveted Scoop of the Year award for a string of agenda-setting exclusives about Phillip Schofield

Stephen Wright (pictured) was named Journalist of the Year for a series of fearless and jaw-dropping scoops exposing Albanian drug barons and previously unknown details about the disappearance of Lord Lucan

Sabrina Miller (pictured) took the Young Journalist of the Year award for her historic undercover exposé of a plot to sabotage the Grand National, which led to 118 arrests and ultimately saved the great race

Katie Hind took the coveted Scoop of the Year award for a string of agenda-setting exclusives about Phillip Schofield. 

Judges paid tribute to her tireless reporting, saying that ‘in the face of constant denials and threats of legal action’ she had ‘doggedly pursued her tip’ and that the ‘impact of the story was immense’.

Northern Correspondent Liz Hull and Caroline Cheetham’s acclaimed podcast series, The Trial of Lucy Letby, earned them the Multi-media Journalist of the Year award.

Their coverage of the long-running court case, which has now had an incredible 14million downloads, was described by judges as ‘multimedia journalism with reach and impact’.

Sabrina Miller took the Young Journalist of the Year award for her historic undercover exposé of a plot to sabotage the Grand National, which led to 118 arrests and ultimately saved the great race.

With award-winning scoops, brilliant analysis and ground-breaking investigations, it’s little wonder that the Mail titles remain Britain’s best and biggest selling papers.

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