WESLEY LOWERY, co-chairman of the Board of Directors, is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author and correspondent for CBS News. Lowery was previously a national correspondent at the Washington Post, specializing in issues of race and law enforcement. He led the team awarded the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting in 2016 for the creation and analysis of a real-time database to track fatal police shootings in the United States. His project, Murder With Impunity, an unprecedented look at unsolved homicides in major American cities, was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 2019. His first book, They Can’t Kill Us All: Ferguson, Baltimore and a New Era in America’s Racial Justice Movement, was a New York Times bestseller and was awarded the Christopher Isherwood Prize for Autobiographical Prose by the LA Times Book Prizes.

Jamaal Glenn

JAMAAL GLENN is an entrepreneur, venture capital investor, university professor, writer, speaker, and consultant. He is the Founder & CEO of JG Holdings, an investment and advisory firm as well as an adjunct professor at New York University (NYU) and the City University of New York (CUNY), where he teaches graduate and executive education courses on finance, marketing, and entrepreneurship. Previously, he founded Glenn Media Group, a boutique consulting firm with clients that have included Google, Harvard University, and the City of New York. He is the board chair of The Pivot Fund, a venture-philanthropy fund investing in community-led news organizations and a board director and treasurer at LION Publishers, the nation’s largest membership organization for independent news publishers. Jamaal is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, a Marshall Memorial Fellow with the German Marshall Fund of the United States, and a New Urban Progress Fellow with Das Progressive Zentrum, Alfred Herrhausen Gesellschaft, and Progressive Policy Institute. He received an MBA from the Stanford Graduate School of Business, an MPA from the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, and bachelors degrees in finance and journalism from the University of Missouri.

OLIVIER KAMANDA is a Product Manager at Google supporting Google Shopping. Previously he was a Product Manager at Facebook supporting teams in Business Integrity and Data Portability. He is the former Director of Learning and Impact Strategy at the Knight Foundation. In 2016, Olivier served as a White House Presidential Innovation Fellow, where he was the product lead for Code.gov, America’s platform for sharing and improving government software. He is the founder of Ideal Impact, a civic-tech company that measures the emotional impact of news by giving readers an opportunity to volunteer, donate, advocate and support causes in real time. Prior to Ideal Impact, Olivier served as a speechwriter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Olivier practiced law as an investment funds attorney at White & Case LLP, representing investment managers in establishing private equity, real estate and hedge funds in emerging markets. He is also the founder and former executive editor of Foreign Policy Digest, an online magazine aimed at engaging young Americans in international affairs. Olivier is a term member of the Council on Foreign Relations and serves on the board of directors of the Equal Rights Center and the Landon School. He is a former trustee of Princeton University, and a former chair of the Dulles Justice Coalition, which provides rapid response information services to travelers and immigrants. He is a Halcyon Incubator Fellow, a Truman National Security Project Fellow. Olivier previously served as an elected Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner in the Adams Morgan neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Olivier was named one of D.C.’s “Most Influential Leaders Under 40” by Washington Life Magazine in 2015. Olivier earned his bachelor’s degree in Engineering from Princeton University and his law degree from the University of Pennsylvania Law School.

JENNNIFER 8. LEE is a journalist and author who spent nine years at The New York Times. There, she covered technology, Washington, crime, poverty and culture. Lee has played a lead role in the Knight News Challenge, a $25 million initiative to support news innovation, and worked on bringing journalism content to the 2011 SXSW conference in Austin, Texas. She is also one of the lead organizers of Hacks/Hackers, a rapidly expanding global grassroots group that brings technologists and journalists together. Lee is also the author of The Fortune Cookie Chronicles: Adventures in the World of Chinese Food. She also serves on the Nieman Foundation advisory board, chairs the Asian American Writers Workshop board and is a past member of the Poynter Institute national advisory board. Lee graduated with a degree in applied math and economics from Harvard.

SUE SUH (she/her) most recently had the joy of serving as Chief People Officer and Chief Impact Officer for the 100-year-old global media company TIME, whose commitment to trust, integrity, equality and courage shines a light on the stories and storytellers who move the world. Before joining TIME Sue’s career spanned philanthropy and public service around the globe. She served in multiple leadership roles with The Rockefeller Foundation – including in the president’s office, human resources, employee services and facilities, the Asia office in Bangkok, and supporting cross-cultural and interdisciplinary convening and residency programs for the Foundation’s Bellagio Center in Italy. Prior to Rockefeller, Sue served in various locations with the U.S. Departments of State and Defense, beginning her federal government career as a Presidential Management Fellow. Sue was honored to be named one of the Top 100 Women Leaders of New York for 2021, a 2021 New Yorker for New York and a 2019 Folio:100 member in the C-Suite category. Outside of media, she serves on the Board of the Classical Theatre of Harlem, and has served in the past on the Boards of Special Olympics Asia Pacific and the Coca-Cola Scholars Foundation. Sue graduated from Princeton University (Politics BA) and Columbia University (Political Science MA), and was grateful to earn a Fulbright award to teach in her family’s homeland of South Korea.

DANIEL SULEIMAN is a partner in Covington & Burling LLP, an international law firm headquartered in Washington, D.C. He specializes in white collar defense and investigations, representing institutions and individuals in sensitive matters presenting significant criminal and civil risk.  Daniel is a zealous advocate who was previously named one of Washington’s “40 most promising lawyers age 40 and under” by the National Law Journal.  Before rejoining Covington in 2013, he served as Deputy Chief of Staff and Counselor to the Assistant Attorney General in the U.S. Department of Justice’s Criminal Division.  Born in Los Angeles and raised in New Jersey, Boston and Paris, Daniel speaks fluent French and conversational Spanish.  He maintains an active pro bono practice and writes frequently on issues of criminal law, having published pieces in the Wall Street Journal, Baltimore Sun, National Law Journal, Bloomberg, Inside Counsel and Law360. Before becoming a lawyer, Daniel was a high school teacher in Morocco at The American School of Tangier.  He earned his law degree from Columbia Law School, where he was a two-time James Kent Scholar and Articles Editor on the Columbia Law Review, and his undergraduate degree magna cum laude from Harvard College, where he served as Co-Editorial Chair of the Harvard Crimson and won the 22nd Rolling Stone College Journalism Competition for Essays and Criticism. Daniel lives in Chevy Chase, Maryland, with his wife and four children.

Andres Torres

ANDRES TORRES is a program officer at the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. He leads the Foundation’s investments in journalism, working to foster sustainable and inclusive reporting for the Chicago region’s diverse communities. The Foundation’s goal is to create an information-rich environment that empowers all residents to take an active part in our democracy. Prior to McCormick, he worked on statewide early childhood policy in Illinois to close achievement gaps that adversely affect communities of color. His work in public policy began at the City of Chicago and continued at the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning, managing projects ranging from tourism to transportation initiatives. A native Chicagoan, he was raised in a bilingual Spanish/English home while learning German. He studied at Yale University and the London School of Economics.

Board Emeritus

Charles Lewis

CHARLES LEWIS, an esteemed former producer for ABC News and CBS News “60 Minutes,” is the founder of two Pulitzer Prize-winning nonprofit news organizations: the Center for Public Integrity (1989) and the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ, 1997). The ICIJ, known for publishing the Panama Papers in 2016, represents the largest journalism collaboration in history, involving over 370 journalists worldwide. Under Lewis’s leadership, the Center for Public Integrity produced around 300 investigative reports and 14 books between 1989 and 2004, receiving over 30 national journalism awards. Lewis, who was recognized by the New Yorker in 1996 for his impactful work, has also held prestigious academic positions, including professor of journalism at American University, Ferris Professor at Princeton, Shorenstein Fellow at Harvard, and Visiting Fellow at Oxford’s Reuters Institute. He is now the emeritus executive editor at the Investigative Reporting Workshop.

CRAIG NEWMARK is the founder of craigslist and a web pioneer, philanthropist and a leading advocate on behalf of trustworthy journalism, voting rights, veterans and military families, women in tech, as well as other civic and social justice causes. He is a founding funder and executive committee member of the News Integrity Initiative administered by the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism. In 2016, he created the Craig Newmark Foundation, which funded the Craig Newmark Chair in Journalism Ethics at the Poynter Institute. In addition to the Center for Public Integrity, Craig also serves on the board of directors of the Columbia Journalism Review, Poynter Foundation, Sunlight Foundation, Blue Star Families, Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, VetsInTech, Girls Who Code, Women in Public Service Project and Consumers Union/Consumer Reports. He also serves on the advisory boards of nearly twenty other nonprofit organizations. Born in Morristown, New Jersey, he now lives in San Francisco.