Produces a structured research framework for finding, organizing, and verifying a named person's previous public statements on a specific topic. Useful for interview prep, fact-checking, and accountability reporting.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/autopunk-media-skills:prior-statements-researcherThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Produces a structured research framework for finding, organising, and verifying a named person's previous public statements on a specific topic, so a journalist can enter an interview or write a story with full command of the subject's record.
Produces a structured research framework for finding, organising, and verifying a named person's previous public statements on a specific topic, so a journalist can enter an interview or write a story with full command of the subject's record.
Required:
Optional:
Identifies the most productive source categories — distinguishes between primary sources (the person's own words: speeches, official statements, published interviews, social media posts, authored op-eds) and secondary sources (other journalists' quotes, reported summaries, attributed paraphrases) and explains why primary sources must be prioritised.
Maps a search strategy by source type — for each source category, provides specific search queries, platform names, and archive resources most likely to surface relevant statements. Search logic accounts for name variations, job title changes, organisational affiliations, and common misspellings.
Provides a verification checklist — flags the key questions a journalist must ask before relying on any statement found: Is the quote from a primary source? Is the date confirmed? Is context preserved (not clipped)? Has it been disputed by the subject or their representatives?
Structures the output as a working document — formats findings as a table the journalist can populate as they search, with columns for date, source, verbatim quote or paraphrase, source type (primary/secondary), and a notes field for flagging contradictions or follow-up questions.
Highlights contradiction indicators — if the journalist provides known positions, the assistant identifies the types of language shifts, hedging patterns, or topic pivots that often signal a change in stance, so the journalist knows what to listen for.
A structured research brief, approximately 600–900 words, divided into four sections:
Tone: professional, practical. No speculation about what the person said — this is a research framework, not a factual summary.
"Marta Voss" "patient access" site:hartfieldhealth.org not just Marta Voss quotes)Person: Dr. Elena Marchetti, Director of the Institute for Climate Risk at Northbrook University Topic: Whether carbon offset markets can substitute for direct emissions reductions Time window: 2018 to present Context: I'm interviewing her for a long-form magazine piece on voluntary carbon markets. I've seen her quoted both supporting and criticising offsets in different articles and I want to get to the bottom of her actual record.
Prior Statements Research Brief — Dr. Elena Marchetti / Carbon Offset Markets Prepared as a research framework. All findings must be verified against primary sources before use.
1. Search Strategy
Academic and institutional sources (primary — highest priority)
site:northbrook.edu "Elena Marchetti" offsets"Elena Marchetti" "carbon offsets" OR "voluntary carbon market"Broadcast and podcast appearances (primary)
"Elena Marchetti" carbonElena Marchetti climatePrint interviews and op-eds (primary and secondary)
"Elena Marchetti" AND ("carbon offset" OR "net zero") AND (interview OR "she said" OR "according to")"Elena Marchetti"author:"Elena Marchetti" climate site:theguardian.com OR site:ft.com OR site:nytimes.comOfficial records and policy documents (primary)
Social media (primary, with caveats)
from:@[handle] offset OR offsets since:2018-01-012. Key Platforms and Archives
| Platform | What to look for |
|---|---|
| Google Scholar | Authored papers with explicit policy conclusions |
| Northbrook University institutional repository | Working papers, policy briefs, lectures |
| LexisNexis / Factiva | Attributed quotes in wire copy and newspapers |
| Carbon Brief archive | Expert commentary and attributed quotes |
| YouTube | Conference keynotes, university lectures, media appearances |
| Internet Archive (Wayback Machine) | Deleted or changed web pages (e.g. if her institute's position page has been updated) |
3. Statement Tracking Table
| Date | Source | Quote or paraphrase | Primary / Secondary | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
(Copy and complete this table as you find sources. Add rows as needed.)
4. Red Flags and Verification Traps
npx claudepluginhub ur-grue/autopunk-media-skills --plugin autopunk-media-skillsProduces a structured research plan to locate all published works, media appearances, and public statements by a specific person across academic, news, social, and official sources.
Researches primary source materials (tweets, blogs, forums, chat logs) to gather direct quotes and first-person accounts for documentary projects.
Plans and conducts journalistic interviews to maximize source cooperation and information yield. Useful for reporters and investigators preparing structured interviews.