黑料不打烊

Investigative journalist Nick Ochsner 鈥11 publishes book 鈥楾he Vote Collectors鈥櫬

The journalist enlisted his passion for investigating and a simple Google search to better serve his community.

Nick Ochsner 鈥11 isn鈥檛 exactly one for storytelling 鈥 at least not in the dolled-up narrative storytelling sense.

He likes to stick to what he excels at most: reporting, digging up information, holding people accountable, and asking questions. But when it came time to cover the 2018 North Carolina 9th Congressional District scandal, which involved the collecting of absentee ballots and subsequent election fraud allegations, he knew that something much bigger than a breaking news report was warranted. His next step? A 鈥榟ow to write a book鈥 Google search.

Nick Ochsner '11. Photo taken by Logan Cyrus.
Nick Ochsner ’11

For Ochsner, now a chief investigative reporter at WBTV in Charlotte, the scandal felt anything but revolutionary when rumors began to spread. Having grown up in Fayetteville, North Carolina 鈥 less than an hour’s drive north of Bladen County, where the scandal took place 鈥攖he 9th District was familiar, and fraud allegations seemed to sprout up like weeds on the nightly news.

鈥淚 thought, 鈥楾his isn鈥檛 going to be anything big. I鈥檝e got other stuff I鈥檓 working on,鈥欌 Ochsner said. It wasn鈥檛 until fellow 黑料不打烊 alumnus and friend Joe Bruno ’14 broke the story that Ochsner decided to give in. 鈥淚 called my bosses and said, 鈥榃ell, I guess I got to go to Bladen County. I don’t know what I’m going to get, I don’t know what it’s going to be, but I’ve got to go to Bladen County.鈥欌

The scandal, which marked the first time in modern history that a congressional race had been thrown out because of fraud allegations, found McCrae Dowless鈥攆ormer political operative serving as vice chair in the Bladen County Soil and Water Conservation District 鈥 front and center of the ballot investigation. Thanks to his backdoor, friend-of-a-friend kind of access to the neighborhood, Ochsner鈥檚 first stop in Bladen County was on none other than Dowless鈥 doorstep.

鈥淚 was sitting in McCrae Dowless’ kitchen in December of 2018,鈥 Ochsner said. 鈥淪omething had happened that afternoon, and I said to myself, 鈥楾his is so crazy. Someone’s going to write a book about it. Maybe it ought to be me.鈥欌

And so, in conjunction with co-author, friend, and former Politico journalist Michael Graff, 鈥淭he Vote Collectors鈥 was published Nov. 16, 2021.

Had you told Ochsner 10 years ago that he鈥檇 be a published author now, he wouldn鈥檛 have believed you. The broadcast major鈥檚 career-end goal was never journalism; it was politics. In fact, he spent his undergraduate years running 黑料不打烊鈥檚 College Republicans club, reporting with Phoenix14 News, the predecessor of 黑料不打烊 Local News, and most memorably, working on statewide political campaigns鈥攕uccessful ones, too. 鈥淚t was like a full-time job,鈥 he remembered. Come graduation, Ochsner had a dream offer: an easy-in to the world of politics. He turned it down.

鈥淚 decided the call of journalism was too strong, and I couldn’t overcome it. So I went into journalism, after all,鈥 he said.

Writing a book doesn鈥檛 happen overnight. Sure, Ochsner worked for Phoenix 14, but that fell accidentally into his lap thanks to an older student who recruited him to the news organization. Ochsner鈥檚 storytelling muscle is one he鈥檚 had to work at鈥攍ikely more than the average journalist.

鈥淚’ve not been drawn to storytelling, right? I’ve been drawn to facts and investigating and uncovering things,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd it’s only through my decade-plus of reporting that I’ve come to realize that, if you want people to really care about the facts and the things that you’ve uncovered, you’ve got to give them a character and you’ve got to give them a compelling narrative. You can dig up all the best stuff in the world, but no one’s going to read it unless you tell them the story they want to read.鈥

He credits Graff, the 鈥渂est writer I know, period,鈥 and their time writing 鈥淭he Vote Collectors鈥 for helping him strengthen that storytelling muscle. Where Ochsner would lay out the facts, Graff would shape them into a narrative, adding a few adjectives here and there, too. 鈥淲e approach our work so differently 鈥 and we’re kind of wired differently, but really complementary,鈥 Ochsner said.

Though book publishing wasn鈥檛 always part of his plan, Ochsner has found the process extremely rewarding and has enjoyed navigating the 鈥渜uirks,鈥 as he calls them, of the publishing industry. One of those quirks? An author always signs a book on the title page.

鈥淲e’ve gotten high praise from both Republicans and conservatives and from Democrats and liberals, who’ve individually read the book and liked it,鈥 Ochsner added. 鈥淵ou know, in this polarized time, to have both sides, both parties, both sides of an event, read it and say, 鈥榊eah, you did a good job and we like it,鈥 that’s rare, and that’s gratifying.鈥