The governor and two of his opponents are calling for investigations after Reveal found a government contractor held kids in a vacant office building.
Valeria Fernández
Valeria Fernández is a recipient of the 2018 American Mosaic Journalism Prize awarded by the Heising-Simons Foundation for freelance journalists doing long-form narrative covering underrepresented or misrepresented communities.
She has been reporting on Arizona’s immigrant community and the many angles and faces of the immigration debate for over 15 years. In 2004, the National Association of Hispanic Publications named Fernández “Latina Journalist of the Year."
Fernández currently freelances for Reveal, CNN Español, Radio Bilingue, PRI's Global Nation, and The World, Al Jazeera English, Phoenix New Times, and The Guardian.
Fernández co-directed and produced "Two Americans," a documentary that parallels the stories of Sheriff Joe Arpaio and a 9-year-old U.S. citizen whose parents were arrested by the sheriff’s deputies during a workplace immigration raid. The film won the Audience Award for Best Feature Documentary at the Arizona International Film Festival. It aired on Al Jazeera America in 2013 and was an official selection of the DOCSDF Mexican Film Festival.
In 2014, Fernández co-directed six short documentaries along the U.S.-Mexico borderlands as part of the international web-documentary Connected Walls.
In 2015, she was a producer and reporter for the Arizona Center for Investigative Reporting on a project that cast light on the economic and social impacts of a mine spill in Northern Mexico that broadcast in PBS, San Diego. The multi-media project won an Arizona Press Club recognition for environmental reporting.
As a fellow for the International Center for Journalists she published stories in 2017 for PRI's The World, and NPR’s Spanish podcast Radio Ambulante on human rights violations tied to the incarceration of Central-American youth in Mexico.
This year she is a fellow for the Adelante initiative of the International Women Media Foundation. She's covering issues at the intersection of trauma, deportation and migration.