Donna Chisholm
Donna Elise Chisholm is a New Zealand investigative journalist and author.
Career
Chisholm was the first female chief reporter at the Auckland Star newspaper. Former New Zealand Listener editor Jenny Wheeler has called her the most "outstanding health reporter New Zealand's ever seen." She is best known for her campaign in the Sunday Star-Times to free David Dougherty from prison for a rape he did not commit. Dougherty was subsequently exonerated and awarded $868,728 in compensation. Chisholm's six-year investigation was dramatised in the 2009 Television New Zealand film Until Proven Innocent, and recounted in the 2017 book A Moral Truth: 150 years of investigative journalism in New Zealand by James Hollings.Chisholm is the author of the book From the Heart, a biography of the New Zealand heart surgeon Brian Barratt-Boyes.
She lives in Auckland, and was formerly the editor-at-large for monthly current affairs magazine North & [South (New Zealand magazine)|North & South], and senior writer for the weekly New Zealand Listener.
Honours and awards
- 2000: New Zealand Newspaper [Publishers' Association awards|Qantas Media Awards] Newspaper Feature Writer of the Year
- 2004: New Zealand Qantas Media Awards Newspaper Feature Writer of the Year
- 2011: Newspaper Publishers' [Association awards|Canon Media Awards] Magazine Feature Writer of the Year: the Helen Paske Trophy
- 2016: Canon Media Awards Science and Technology Feature Writing award
- 2017: Outstanding achievement award at the 2017 Voyager Media Awards
- 2018: Voyager Media Awards Science and Technology Award, joint winner