Joe Johns

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joe Johns is a CNN correspondent based in the Washington, D.C. bureau.

[edit] History

Joe Johns is a CNN correspondent based in the network's Washington, D.C., bureau. Johns joined CNN as a congressional correspondent in January 2004 after covering Capitol Hill for NBC News for more than 10 years. He reports on government accountability, waste and fraud for Anderson Cooper 360° and other programs throughout the network.

At the Capitol, Johns has covered numerous debates about legislation, the impeachment of former President Bill Clinton, the anthrax mailings following the September 11 attacks and recent developments on the U.S. Supreme Court, including the death of Chief Justice Warren Rehnquist and retirement of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor. He also broke the story of House Majority Leader Tom DeLay's first indictment on conspiracy charges. Johns provided in-depth reporting on the Sago Mine disaster in January 2006. He covered the entire "Beltway Sniper" saga from the first shootings to the arrests of two suspects and was among the NBC Nightly News team to receive an Edward R. Murrow Award from the Radio-Television News Directors Association for the reports.

Johns reporting has also included the White House and The Pentagon. In 1996, he covered Clinton's historic tour of Africa and followed first lady Hillary Clinton on a seven-nation visit to central Europe. In 1994, he traveled to Haiti with Marines ordered by Clinton to assist in that country's transition from a dictatorship to a democracy. More recently, Johns attended the first boot camp for war correspondents at Quantico and Norfolk Naval Station in Virginia.

Johns first came to Washington, D.C., in 1983 when he joined WRC-TV, an NBC affiliate. There, he won an Emmy for a spot news piece on the violent tactics of the Nation of Islam to rid a district neighborhood of drugs.

Before joining WRC-TV, Johns was a reporter at WSOC-TV, Charlotte, N.C. He began his TV career as a reporter and anchor in 1980 at WSAZ-TV in Huntington, W.Va.

Johns is the recipient of two National Association of Black Journalists Salute to Excellence awards. He was honored first in 2005 for a profile on lynching survivor James Cameron and then again in 2007 for a series of pieces on environmental injustice. He also contributed to CNN's Emmy award-winning Election Night coverage in 2006.

Johns is a former chairman of the executive committee of Correspondents of the Congressional Radio and Television Galleries and president of the Radio and Television Correspondents' Association. He is also a member of the board of Marshall University's Yeager Scholars, of the Howard University School of Communications Board of Visitors and D.C. Law Students in Court.

[edit] External links