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Alfredo Corchado

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Nationality
  
American, Mexican

Role
  
Journalist

Name
  
Alfredo Corchado

Years active
  
1994–present

Occupation
  
Journalist Author


Alfredo Corchado Zcalo Public Square A Childhood Dream Fulfilled


Full Name
  
Alfredo Corchado Jimenez

Education
  
University of Texas at El Paso (BA)

Books
  
Midnight in Mexico: A Reporter's Journey Through a Country's Descent Into Darkness

Alfredo corchado 2013 national book festival


Alfredo Corchado Jiménez is an award-winning Mexican-American journalist who has covered Mexico for many years, and is currently the Mexico City bureau chief of The Dallas Morning News. He specializes in covering the drug wars and the U.S.-Mexico border, writing stories on such topics as drug cartels and organized crime, corruption among police and government officials, and the spread of drug cartels into U.S. cities.

Contents

Alfredo Corchado blogsmuedutowercenterfiles201305AlfredoCor

The Nieman Foundation for Journalism has noted that he has “described mass shootouts that no one else writes about, obtained and described videos of revenge executions, and revealed how the few arrested for the mass murder of women in Juárez are often innocent stooges.” Howard Campbell, author of Drug War Zone, has called Corchado “the top American journalist covering Mexico today” whose “knowledge of the Mexican political system, the drug trade, and modern Mexican society is non-pareil.” Corchado currently lives in Mexico City.

Alfredo Corchado PERSPECTIVES Alfredo Corchado KTEP

A mexico border tour with alfredo corchado americas quarterly


Early life and education

Alfredo Corchado httpspbstwimgcomprofileimages5097675423074

Corchado was born in Durango, Mexico, the oldest of eight children. When he was five years old, his mother, in despair over an accident in which his younger sister died, decided to leave Mexico. Taking him and his siblings, she and his father migrated legally to the United States when he was six to the San Joaquin Valley in California, where Cochado's parents became migrant farm workers. He worked alongside them, and when he was 13, PBS interviewed him for a piece on the lives of migrant workers.

Alfredo Corchado Midnight In Mexico The AltLatino Interview With Journalist

Corchado later recalled “the fact that there were people interested in our situation, and how we lived, and the fact that the fields had no water, there were no toilets...just the fact that anybody cared, and they were interested in giving us a voice―I think that always kind of stayed with me as a kid.” He has also written, however, that before his interest in journalism he had aspiration of becoming a songwriter.

Alfredo Corchado Alfredo Corchado Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Corchado's family later moved to El Paso, Texas, where they ran a restaurant called Fred's Cafe. He graduated from El Paso Community College in 1984 and graduated from the University of Texas at El Paso in 1987 with a Bachelor of Arts in Journalism. Corchado later said that his parents felt that he, as the oldest child, should set an example for his younger siblings, and that UT at El Paso was the perfect place to prepare for a career as a foreign correspondent because it is situated “right on the border, so that when you park your car and walk to the campus you're looking at another country right before your eyes.” He has stated that most Americans “don't really know Mexico,” but UT El Paso was a “unique place” that provided “a bridge between these two countries,” which he desired in his journalism.

Alfredo Corchado Alfredo Corchado Wikipedia

Corchado credited his mother with having encouraged him to return to school and making it possible for him “to leave the fields.” When told that he was not cut out for journalism, he had considered becoming the manager of his parents' restaurant. “But I realized how much I loved being a journalist.” And so he continued his pursuit of journalism.

Career

Alfredo Corchado Washington Journal Alfredo Corchado Drug Trafficking Cartels

Corchado also stated that his dream of a career in journalism was largely based on the hopes of finding the roots of his homeland. According to different accounts, Corchado’s parents were supportive of his journalism, but did not want him to report on drug trafficking. Corchado has said that he tried to avoid writing about the drug wars “until the issue was something you couldn't ignore anymore.”

Corchado worked on the U.S.-Mexico border for Public Radio, later becoming a reporter for the Standard-Examiner in Ogden, Utah; the El Paso Herald-Post; and the Wall Street Journal, based in its Philadelphia and Dallas bureaus. Because the Journal would not send him to Mexico, he eventually decided to take a job at the Dallas Morning News.

He went to work for the Morning News in 1994, based in Mexico. He traveled around Cuba extensively on many occasions, reporting on a range of topics, before helping to open the newspaper's Havana bureau, which was one of the first U.S. news bureaus to be established in that country.

He left Mexico for Washington in 2000, convinced “that the election of an opposition government, the end of 71 years of one party rule, signaled the automatic birth of democratic institutions” in Mexico. However, he later remarked that organized crime took power and began buying off agencies ranging from police to the media, becoming the de facto rulers of the country.

Accordingly, after working from 2000 to 2003 out of the Morning News’s Washington, D.C., bureau, he returned to Mexico to serve as the newspaper's Mexico City bureau chief. He was the Morning News's lead reporter during Mexico's 2000 presidential election, was the first to interview the newly elected President Vicente Fox, and was one of a small group of experts who briefed then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton before her first trip to Mexico. But the abiding preoccupation of his journalism has been with the U.S.-Mexico border and the drug wars. Corchado's coverage of the drug cartels established a foundation for coverage by other news organizations.

Late in 2003, he began covering a series of killings of women in Ciudad Juárez. His discovery that the Juárez cartel and a U.S. informant had played roles in the killings led to an internal U.S. inquiry and to the removal of high-ranking officials in the Immigration Customs Enforcement agency. In 2005, his reporting on drug violence led him to the discovery that crimes had been committed in Texas on the orders of the Zetas, a Mexican paramilitary group.

Corchado wrote in May 2012 that with the U.S. economy in a downturn, “Mexicans are increasingly staying in their hometowns, finding jobs and carving out a livelihood, or...migrating inside Mexico in search of work.” Largely thanks to a successful tourism campaign, he noted, Mexico's south is “booming” – so prosperous that, according to one Mexican working there, it “doesn’t feel like Mexico.” He wrote an article in November 2012 celebrating the fact that the city of Juárez “is indeed moving forward”. In November 2012 he wrote that Enrique Peña Nieto, who was about to be sworn in as president, “takes over a nation of nearly 117 million with a resurgent economy that has become one of the most competitive in the world, surpassing Brazil in annual growth rate. Drug killings, which have been the top priority for Mexicans, aren’t over by any means, but they appear to be receding.”

Interviewed on NPR in November 2012, shortly after the presidential election in Mexico, Corchado described the country as “very divided. They have very high expectations that Pena Nieto will somehow bring down the violence, somehow the economy will grow. I mean there is, at this point, zero migration to the United States, but they're hoping that even if the United States economy picks up, that Mexicans will still be able to stay in Mexico and build – keep building on that middle class society and transform into a country of rule of law.”

Book

Corchado is the author of Midnight in Mexico: A Reporter’s Journey, which will be published in 2013 by Penguin.

Corchado has explained that “shortly after returning to Mexico, I received an offer to write a book, with the working title, Midnight in Mexico, which would mean more time away from work.” Although concerned his editors would not want him to write it, they fully supported it, and expressed to him the importance of writing the book.

The book has been praised by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Tracy Kidder as “the story of a journalist’s dangerous and notable efforts to report on Mexico’s horrible drug wars. The book brings a special clarity, the clarity of the personal and particular, to a very important and confusing subject, and it is in itself an absorbing story, marked by careful attention to fact and also by the author’s deep love for his homeland. Mr. Corchado is the kind of reporter and writer who revives one’s faith in journalism.” Benjamin Alire Sáenz, author of Calendar of Dust, has said: “Anyone interested in what is happening and has happened in Mexico for the past six years must read this book....I believe Midnight in Mexico will become one of the most necessary books about the Mexican-American experience in this country.”

Other professional activities

Corchado has participated in many symposia and other such events in both the U.S. and Mexico, and has appeared on television and radio a number of times in both countries.

He took part in the U.S.-Mexico Forum in February 2008 at the University of California, Berkeley, sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation in collaboration with the International Studies Department at the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM). He spoke on “How to Report in Mexico Without Being Jailed, Kidnapped or Killed.”

In 2009, he took part in a forum on the Mexican drug war at Stanford University.

In 2010 he took part in a panel discussion at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington on the press freedom crisis in Mexico. He told the audience that “I was recently in Ciudad Juárez with a photojournalist who covered Bosnia, Baghdad, and Kabul and she said, this is worse than covering those places. At least there you had a sense of who's who. Here you're covering ghosts.”

At a 2012 Logan Symposium on investigative journalism at UC Berkeley, Corchado took part in a panel discussion on the topic “When the Story Bites Back.”

Corchado has discussed the drug war several times on WBUR radio and on The World, a co-production of the BBC World Service, PRI and WGBH Boston.

Danger and death threats

Corchado has had his life threatened on numerous occasions, and has had to leave Mexico for short periods more than once to ensure his safety. Nonetheless, he has continued to work a beat that, as the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard has noted, “scares off most other journalists....In this savage climate, Corchado has refused to back down.” Corchado has said that Ciudad Juárez, the city in which he covered his “first story...as an aspiring journalist,” was also the “first place I received a death threat when I tested the limits of our fledgling democracy as a journalist.” He has written, “They say that in Mexico they kill you twice: Once by dropping your body in acid or blowing your head off with semiautomatic weapons, and then by spreading rumors about you. In this war to control drug distribution routes to the United States, it’s too often the reporter who pays the ultimate price.”

“Every journalist in Mexico,” he has written, “wakes up to ask the following questions: How far should I go today, what questions should I ask, or not ask, where should I report, or what place should I avoid?....Mexico today is among the most dangerous places to do journalism in the world....This is especially true for those of us who cover the U.S.-Mexico border....Whatever danger we U.S. correspondents face pales in comparison to the dangers faced by our Mexican colleagues.” He explains, “I've always had the luxury of calling my editor in Dallas and saying 'Hey, things are kind of crazy here―get me out of here.'” He has expressed gratitude that his parents, by emigrating to the U.S., had made it possible for him “to obtain a little blue passport that says I am a citizen of the United States of America,” saying that “I have perhaps a naïve, but unwavering belief that if something is to happen to me, there would be consequences to pay. That our newspapers, our media companies, our colleagues would stand up and demand answers and justice, that our deaths wouldn’t become just another number. Someone would seek justice....My Mexican colleagues...don’t have that kind of solidarity among themselves; they don’t share that trust with their own editors, less so with their own government.”.

While in Laredo, Texas, to investigate a story on organized crime in 2005, Corchado was ordered to drop the story by a stranger at a restaurant. The stranger said that there was a van parked outside waiting to pick him up, after which Corchado would be chopped into pieces, a videotape of which would then be sent to his mother in El Paso. Corchado did not drop the story, but did briefly consider becoming an entertainment reporter. Later in the year, he did decide to flee Mexico temporarily after reporting on a leaked video that revealed drug-cartel secrets and revealed government involvement in the cartels.

In 2007, Corchado received a tip from a “trusted U.S. intelligence source” that the Zetas, a paramilitary group spun off from the Gulf Cartel, would be killing an American journalist within 24 hours. The tipster believed that Corchado was the target, and urged that he leave Mexico at once. Corchado phoned some “colleagues who were preparing a celebration dinner for me that evening” – he had just been awarded the Maria Moors Cabot Prize – and “said, there’s a death threat and I think we should cancel dinner. Dudley Althaus from the Houston Chronicle insisted, 'If they’re going to kill you, he said, they will have to kill us, too. So come on over and have some tequila.'”

Instead of leaving Mexico, Corchado went into the countryside to look into the matter. The ensuing hunt for information is recounted in his book Midnight in Mexico. After his investigation, however, Corchado decided that it was wise to take a break from Mexico, and accordingly spent a year at Harvard as a 2008-2009 Nieman fellow. “I became a 2009 Nieman fellow,” he later admitted, “because I was scared, because I questioned whether what I was doing was the right thing. When I returned to Mexico I felt numb, separated from the story because I realized I didn’t want to put my life on the line anymore.” Back on the U.S.-Mexican border, he was determined to keep a distance from danger. But a massacre in Juárez, in which 16 students were killed, mistaken for gang members, changed his mind. “These were the kids who were going to make it to a new life,” Corchado said. “It reignited the anger; it reignited the passion.”

Memberships

Corchado has been a member of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists since 1985.

Honors and awards

Corchado received a 2007 Maria Moors Cabot prize from the School of Journalism at Columbia University in 2007, which cited his “extraordinary bravery and enterprise.”

He has been a Visiting Fellow at the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies at Harvard University since 2008.

He was a 2009 Nieman Fellow at Harvard University, and in the same year won the Gold Nugget from the University of Texas at El Paso.

Due to Corchado's work, the Dallas Morning News was a finalist for a prize awarded by the Center for Public Integrity in Washington.

2014 International Latino Book Awards Finalists

For his coverage of drug trafficking and government corruption along the border, Corchado received the Elijah Parish Lovejoy Award for courage in journalism, bestowed annually by Colby College in Waterville, Maine. In announcing the award, which was presented on September 26, 2010, Colby College reported that Corchado “is regarded as the most intrepid reporter on that beat, according to members of the Lovejoy Selection Committee.”

Corchado was also a Woodrow Wilson Scholar in June and July 2010, working on a project entitled “A Blood Curse: A Personal Account of Mexico's Descent into Darkness,” which later became Midnight in Mexico.

In 2017, Corchado was named one of Americas Quarterly's Top 5 "Border Ambassadors" for his work bringing Mexico and the United States together.

Personal life

Corchado is in a long-term relationship with Angela Kocherga, the border bureau chief for Belo TV, a Texas-based television corporation owned by the same company as the Morning News. “I do worry [about him], but we also can't be paralyzed by fear,” she has said. “If I wasn't doing this myself, maybe I'd be more worried.”

References

Alfredo Corchado Wikipedia