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CYNTHIA McFADDEN Cynthia McFadden was named co-anchor of ABC News' "Nightline" in October 2005. She joined ABC News in February 1994 as the network's legal correspondent. Two years later she was named a correspondent for "PrimeTime," and was made a co-anchor of the broadcast in 2004. Ms. McFadden has won numerous awards for her international work. She has reported extensively from Africa and India on the HIV-AIDS pandemic; from China on the environmental costs of that country's rapid economic growth; and from Israel and India on the illegal sale of women and young girls into sexual slavery. Her investigation into horrific human rights abuses in several Mexican mental hospitals led to a major overhaul of that government's institutions for the mentally ill. In the summer of 2005, in the wake of the London bombings, she traveled to Pakistan for an exclusive interview with President Pervez Musharraf and gathered rare footage of a Pakistan Security Council meeting. Prior to assuming co-anchor duties at "Nightline," Ms. McFadden occasionally sat in for Ted Koppel and reported for the broadcast, including two exclusive reports on the U.S. government's efforts to secure loose nuclear materials both domestically and abroad. Recently on "Nightline," Ms. McFadden has interviewed several candidates for the broadcast's series, "The Contenders," spending time with Senator Hillary Clinton and the former President Bill Clinton, as well as former Senator John Edwards and Elizabeth Edwards. In 2004 Ms. McFadden served as the legal editor and narrator of the ground-breaking ABC News documentary series, "In the Jury Room," which chronicled six homicide trials from a unique, fly-on-the-wall perspective. The series made television history by becoming the first program to show jury deliberations in a death penalty case. Also in 2004 she co-anchored and reported an hour-long documentary on school integration, 50 years after Brown v. Board, which won several awards, including the first-place documentary from the N.Y. Association of Black Journalists. Ms. McFadden's portfolio is diverse. Other "Primetime" reports have included an exclusive interview with Osama bin Laden's pilot; an award-winning report on gays in the military; an in-depth analysis of physicians serving as HMO providers despite having been disciplined for wrong-doing; an exclusive investigation and interview with the man who claims to be the sole attacker in the Central Park Jogger rape case; and an explosive hour-long investigation into a Massachusetts facility that routinely and voluntarily released violent sexual predators who preyed on children after getting out. Ms. McFadden led the first investigation by a major news organization into one of America's darkest secrets, the forced sterilization of 60,000 - 100,000 American citizens; provided two award-winning, exclusive reports on the trafficking of women into sexual slavery - one in Israel and the other in India, where children are sold; provided a disturbing look at the horrifying conditions inside two Mexican government institutions for the mentally ill and retarded (which led to a nation-wide overhaul of the system); tracked five accused murderers to their hiding places in El Salvador, where she interviewed two of them; and investigated the use of female contraceptives to treat convicted rapists. In January of 1999, Ms. McFadden anchored the award-winning ABC News special, "Target America: The Terrorist War," in which she reported on the African Embassy bombings. Before coming to ABC, Ms. McFadden had been an anchor and senior producer at the Courtroom Television Network, beginning with the network's inception in 1991. While at Court TV, she anchored live coverage of more than 200 trials, among them the William Kennedy Smith rape trial, the Menendez brothers' murder trial and the Rodney King trial. From 1984 to 1991, Ms. McFadden was the executive producer of Fred Friendly's Media and Society seminars based at Columbia University. More than 30 of her programs were broadcast on PBS, including series on ethics, the military, terrorism and the Presidency. Ms. McFadden's other awards include the George Foster Peabody Award, an Oversees Press Club Award, six Cine Golden Eagles, the Ohio State Award, two Silver Gavels from the American Bar Association, the Grand Award of the New York Festival, and the Blue Ribbon of the American Film Festival. While at Court TV, she was twice nominated for the CableACE's Anchor of the Year. A native of Maine, Ms. McFadden graduated Phi Beta Kappa and summa cum laude from Bowdoin College. She received her law degree from Columbia University. |