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Erin Siegal

Reporter, Fronteras Desk

Erin Siegal is part of the Fronteras Desk reporting team, based in San Diego at KPBS. She is also a Senior Fellow at the Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism, a Soros Justice Fellow, and a Redux Pictures photographer. She was a 2008-2009 fellow at the Toni Stabile Center for Investigative Journalism at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism. Erin is the author of the award-winning book Finding Fernanda, (Beacon Press 2012), which examines organized crime and child trafficking in international adoption between Guatemala and the U.S. Previously, she wrote a column on public records and government accountability for the Columbia Journalism Review, "The FOIA Watchdog." She's contributed to various media outlets, including Univision, the New York Times, Time, Reuters, Newsweek, O Magazine, Businessweek, Rolling Stone, and more. She lives in Tijuana, Mexico. When she's not eating tacos or working, Erin can be found along the border at Rancho Los Amigos, riding horses and smoking cigars with her favorite vaqueros.

RECENT STORIES ON KPBS
  • Monday, May 5, 2025 at 11 p.m. on KPBS TV / Stream now with KPBS Passport! Learn new ways of thinking about aging from some of the most innovative and impassioned "sages" in the fields of longevity, health and medicine.
  • El Departamento de Defensa informó el jueves sobre la designación de un segundo tramo ubicado en la frontera entre Estados Unidos y México como zona militar para la aplicación de las leyes de inmigración.
  • Learn new ways of thinking about aging from some of the most innovative and impassioned "sages" in the fields of longevity, health and medicine. In conversation with Dychtwald, these experts share their wisdom and candid views from their own personal journeys, as well as discuss the keys to impactful change-making and the transforming roles of individuals, families, communities and government.
  • The National Science Foundation, a major government funder of basic science research, is being shaken up, with over 1,000 grants already terminated and the White House looking to halve its budget.
  • The fracture of Vietnam 50 years ago has had a lasting impact on multiple generations. What does it mean to be Vietnamese today and how can members of the diaspora move forward without letting the war define them?
  • Watch Meredith Hilferty's appraisal of a Vladimir Tretchikoff Painting with Inscribed Book, in "Santa Clara, Hour 3."