... Brookes spent $184 to get his car's wiring replaced?
Were you there when he had the wiring replaced? No.
Did you pay for the repair bill? No.
So, how do you know?
It's because he said so, right?
So, why not let readers know your sourcing? Brookes said he spent $184 to get his car's wiring replaced?
How
   do you know Kasparov was driving home one night when her car fritzed 
  out? Because she said! So add "she said" as attribution.
How do you know how her mechanic found squirrels under the hood? Because she said!
Pretty
   much everything not witnessed by you should have some sort of   
attribution. He said; she said; according to records; whatever.
Make
   sure you have properly attributed everything in your story. 
Basically,   every paragraph after the lede and nut graf should have 
some sort of   attribution affixed to it.
I know that's
 gonna look a bit weird,  having graf after graf with so-and-so said 
this and this other dude said  that and so on. But we do it as 
journalists to make sure that readers  know exactly where we got our 
information. It promotes transparency and  illustrates the factual basis
 for a story.
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