Ed Lavandera is a Senior National Correspondent for CNN based in the Dallas bureau. Since joining CNN in 2001, Lavandera has covered a wide array of historic and high-profile stories for the network. Most notably, he earned the Edward R. Murrow Award for Breaking News coverage of the Charlotte Riots and was a part of the Peabody Award winning teams to cover the BP Gulf Coast oil spill and Hurricane Katrina. He also won a Peabody Award for his 2019 documentary, “The Hidden Workforce: Undocumented in America,” exposing how undocumented immigrants are deeply woven into the fabric of American society, and often in the most unlikely places.
Lavandera has reported along the U.S.-Mexico border on the wall proposed by President Trump, on the protests in Charlotte, NC following the death of Keith Lamont Scott, the deadly ambush of five Dallas police officers, unrest in Ferguson, MO after the shooting of unarmed teen Michael Brown, on the capture and release of POW Bowe Bergdahl, on the Aurora movie theater shooting, destruction caused by Oklahoma tornadoes, the explosion of a fertilizer plant in Texas and the influence of violent Mexican drug cartels on American society. He has also tirelessly investigated mysterious deaths at a Florida reform school for boys and controversial pardons from former Mississippi governor Haley Barbour.
In 2016 Lavandera produced an hour-long documentary about the 2015 Waco, TX shootout between rival motorcycle clubs called “Biker Brawl: Inside the Texas Shootout.” The report included never-before-seen surveillance video obtained by CNN, along with exclusive access to major figures of the outlaw motorcycle clubs.
Lavandera is known for his unique and passionate storytelling and crafting stories that bring to life the wide array of people he meets reporting across the country, displayed through his personalization of US soldier Bowe Bergdahl who went missing in Afghanistan in 2009. Additionally, he covered the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, filing some of his reports from a makeshift field hospital in a Gulf Coast airport and from the flooded streets of New Orleans.
In 2005, Lavandera reported from the President George W. Bush’s ranch in Crawford, Texas, during the anti-war protest led by Cindy Sheehan and covered the “Mississippi Burning” trial of Edgar Ray Killen. In 2004, Lavandera covered three of four hurricanes to hit Florida.
In February 2003, Lavandera covered the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster. Lavandera followed the effort to recover debris from the shuttle as well as the emotional affect the disaster had on those Texas communities. Additionally he has reported on stories across the Southeast, including the Andrea Yates story, the Houston mother accused of drowning her children, and the execution of Timothy McVeigh.
Before joining CNN, Lavandera was a correspondent with WFAA-TV in Dallas. Lavandera reported on the aftermath of the El Salvador earthquake, spending a week chronicling victims’ lives. He also covered Pope John Paul II’s visit to Cuba. Lavandera covered numerous breaking news stories across the state of Texas, including the 1997 Republic of Texas standoff, flooding in southern Texas and Gulf Coast hurricanes. In 1994, Lavandera covered the gubernatorial race between George W. Bush and Ann Richards and in 1992, he reported from the Republican and Democratic political conventions.
Earlier, Lavandera was a news reporter at KVUE-TV in Austin, Texas. He also worked as a news anchor and reporter at KOSA-TV in Midland/Odessa, Texas.
Lavandera earned a Katie Award from the Dallas Press Club and an Emmy nomination for his work on a Hispanic news magazine program at WFAA-TV.
Lavandera holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Texas at Austin and is fluent in Spanish.