Manuel Medrano is a correspondent for ABC
News based in Washington, DC. He covers the Supreme Court
and provides legal analysis for all ABC News broadcasts.
Mr. Medrano came to ABC News in 2004 from
KNBC in Los Angeles, where he was a general assignment reporter,
focusing on legal issues for NBC4’s “Channel
4 News.” There he provided legal analysis and commentary
for the station’s comprehensive coverage of the trials
of O.J. Simpson, the Menendez Brothers, Reginald Denny and
Rodney King, among others. In 1995 his coverage of the Simpson
case earned him an Emmy Award and Golden Mike Award.
Prior to joining KNBC, Mr. Medrano was a
trial lawyer at the law firm of Sonnenschein, Nath &
Rosenthal in Los Angeles, where he specialized in complex
civil and white collar criminal litigation. He also served
as an Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Los Angeles U.S. Attorney’s
Office, where he successfully prosecuted the 1985 kidnapping
and murder case of DEA agent Enrique Camarena. Mr. Medrano
never lost a jury trial. In 1992 he received the U.S. Department
of Justice Award for his performance on the Camarena case.
Since 1988 Mr. Medrano has served as an
Adjunct Professor of Law at Loyola Law School, the University
of Southern California Law School, Pepperdine University
School of Law and Southwestern University School of Law.
He is a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School.