Jelena Cosic

Jelena Cosic is ICIJ’s training manager, Eastern European partnership coordinator and data reporter. She worked on ICIJ’s Pandora Papers, Fincen Files, Uber Files and other projects. Jelena has trained over a 1000 investigative reporters all over the world.
Prior to joining ICIJ, she worked as a reporter, regional coordinator and project manager for the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network, a grouping of non-government organizations promoting freedom of speech, human rights and democratic values across southern and eastern Europe.
She has received several investigative journalism awards, including a Certificate of Excellence, Global Shining Light Award; an EU Investigative Journalism Award in the Western Balkans and Turkey; and several awards during her work with ICIJ, Tom Renner Award, finalists for Pulitzer Prize and Nobel Peace Prize nomination. 

Twitter: @ICIJorg

Coco Gubbels

As a former freelance investigative journalist and with over 10 years of professional project management experience, Coco Gubbels shares techniques for coordinating and facilitating an investigative team like a pro. She studied cultural anthropology and understands the benefits and pitfalls of multicultural and multidisciplinary teams.
She realised that her knowledge and skills would fill a gap in the development of this new type of investigation as the number of collaborating journalists grew. She is committed to supporting the development of robust cross-border investigations and assisting team coordinators to ensure that the team can focus on the investigation.

Twitter: @PostVanCoco

Iliana Papangeli

Iliana Papangeli is the managing director of Solomon, an investigative non-profit newsroom based in Greece. She has been nominated for the European Press Prize ’21 and won the IJ4EU Impact Award ’22. She has participated in several cross-border investigations and her work has been published in media across Europe. She has served as a jury at the IJ4EU Impact Award 2023 and the Evens Journalism Prize 2021. She has a background in Psychology and Social Anthropology.

Twitter: @IPapangeli, @we_are_solomon

Camille Petit

Camille Petit works as a Communications and Project officer at the European Federation of Journalists (EFJ) in Brussels. She studied journalism in France and holds a master’s degree in European studies from La Sorbonne Nouvelle. Prior to joining the EFJ in 2016, she worked as a journalist for different regional media outlets.

Twitter: @CamilleMPetit, @EFJEUROPE

Emma Bergmans

Emma Bergmans is a safety specialist currently working on issues related to the online harassment of (women) journalists, legal intimidation of media workers, and the importance of media in exile in Free Press Unlimited’s Policy & Advocacy team. Previously, Bergmans coordinated FPU’s Safety & Emergency Assistance programme, providing rapid support to journalists worldwide facing a situation of distress and developing new interventions to improve the safety of journalists. She holds a Master’s degree in Conflict Studies & Human Rights and worked on the rights of refugees before joining Free Press Unlimited.

Twitter: @BergmansEmma, @freepressunltd

Julia Amberger

Julia Amberger is an award-winning investigative reporter and researcher based in Berlin. She reports mostly from African and European countries focusing on immersive storytelling and investigations. Amberger has uncovered a corrupt network within UNHCR offices in Uganda and Kenya and explored how blast fishing along the east African coast goes together with the smuggling of explosives. As she grew up in nature, she has a particular interest in environmental topics and how the value of certain species like tunas or pangolins is translated into buildings or weapons. Her stories are published in print magazines such as GEO, Stern, Internazionale, and REPORTAGEN in Germany, Switzerland, and Italy, as well as the German radio station Deutschlandradio and the French-German TV channel Arte. Apart from her journalistic work, she is doing field research and data analysis for a German think tank.

Twitter: @juliaamberger

Jon Erik West

Jon West is a documentary filmmaker, freelance journalist, and researcher based in Finland. He has been working in the media industry since 1993. Jon’s recent works include, “Pedigree Dream”, a documentary trilogy about the European dog trade and “Syntynyt kauppatavaraksi” (Born as a Merchandise) a 10-episode adaptation of Pedigree Dream, aired in Finnish TV broadcaster EVEO 2023, and “Kuolemanjuoksu” (The Deathrun), a documentary film about a Finnish veterinarian rescuing mistreated galgos from Spain to Finland (Spanish greyhounds).
Dogs have always been part of Jon’s life and work. He has published two books about dogs and written several stories, magazine articles, and online articles about the animals, both fictional and informative. In June 2021, Jon West founded an association, Perro On The Road, to investigate the dog trade and consumer protection issues.

Ovidiu Dunel Stancu

Ovidiu Stancu has a background as an independent video producer, being involved in various projects, such as documentaries, short and long feature films, working with internationally awarded directors from Romania such as Radu Jude, Paul Negoescu, and Marian Crisan. He is one of the in-house video producers for Vice Romania working on creating local content for Vice as well as on projects such as “A Curse On Corruption” for Vice UK. Being interested in unknown Romanian stories, Stancu sometimes manages to reveal the truth about the local exorcists in Romania through images.
Stancu has specialised and worked on investigations into animal welfare in Romania for the last ten years. Some projects have been independent, such as the film “Man’s Best Friend” for The Black Sea.
Together with Michael Bird he has formed a team that has worked as undercover investigators for Austrian charity Vier Pfoten to film abuses in dog shelters, and recently to expose chinchilla fur farms for Humane Society International, which was widely spread in the U.S. national press. This provoked a law change in Romania to abolish chinchilla and mink fur farming in 2022, which passed Romania’s lower parliament. Their work on animal welfare has been popular and impactful.

Tim Luimes

Tim Luimes is an investigative journalist specialising in corporate harm by the chemical, tobacco and food industry. He is deputy editor-in-chief at the Amsterdam-based journalism collective The Investigative Desk. He initiated the Forever Pollution Project, which revealed pollution by “forever chemicals” across Europe. Currently, he is focussing on exposing tax avoidance and evasion by Western multinationals in Africa.

Twitter: @tjluimes, @InvestigativeD

Emmanuelle Picaud

Journalist for more than seven years, Emmanuelle Picaud has investigated various subjects, from the ecological transition of architecture to academic research in the field of social sciences. She became a freelancer in 2021 after five years of writing in French specialised press as a section editor. Since this period, she has published investigations in the national and international press, in le Monde (France), the BBC (England), El Diario.es (Spain) and le Temps (Switzerland). In 2023 she was the coordinator of the European investigation “Cashing on carbon credits”, a series of articles that demonstrate how cement and siderurgy companies used free allowances to generate billions of profits on the European carbon market.
Regarding her academic background, she has a specialisation in scientific journalism (she has a master’s degree from Lille Lille School of Journalism in France), a master’s degree in Urbanism and a Bachelor’s in Philosophy. She regularly writes for newspapers specialised in these fields.
Picaud speaks French, English, and Chinese (Mandarin).

Twitter: @epicaud1