Paul Goldberg joined The Cancer Letter in 1986. He broke the story that led to the ImClone scandal and the key stories in the controversy over erythropoiesis-stimulating agents. His reporting on the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industry has triggered numerous investigations by Congressional committees and law enforcement agencies and has been recognized by the Washington DC Professional Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, the Gerald Loeb Awards, and the Newsletter and Electronic Publishers Foundation. He was a reporter for the Wichita (KA) Eagle and the Reston Connection. He authored a history of the Helsinki Watch group in the former USSR, called "The Final Act" (William Morrow, 1988), and co-authored, with Ludmilla Alexeyeva, "The Thaw Generation: Coming of Age in the Post-Stalin Era" (Little, Brown, 1990; and in paperback, University of Pittsburgh Press). Goldberg also translated from the Russian, "To Live Like Everyone," the memoirs of the late dissident Anatoly Marchenko (Henry Holt, 1989). He is a graduate of Duke University with a B.A. in economics (1981).