
Immigrants trek to U.S., chasing rumors of amnesty
One 15-year-old is fleeing gang violence in Honduras with nothing but a plastic bag of his clothes, hoping to get to his sister in Houston
Watch CBS News
Manuel Bojorquez is a CBS News national correspondent based in Miami. He joined CBS News in 2012 as a Dallas-based correspondent and was promoted to national correspondent for the network's Miami bureau in January 2017. Bojorquez reports across all CBS News broadcasts and platforms.
He has covered major news events in Texas and throughout the South and was one of the first network news correspondents on the scene of the Dallas police ambush in July 2016. In 2015, Bojorquez was part of the team awarded the Edward R. Murrow Award for a report about a tornado that devastated parts of an Arkansas town.
Bojorquez has also reported extensively from Latin America for CBS News, most recently following Pope Francis' visit to Mexico in February 2016. His travels have also taken him to Argentina, Cuba, El Salvador and Guatemala.
Previously, he was a general assignment reporter at WSB-TV in Atlanta. While there, he covered a number of important stories, including Tropical Storm Fay, the 2008 presidential elections and the first Sunday service at Ebenezer Baptist Church after President Obama's victory. In 2011, he was awarded a NATAS Southeast Emmy for Live Reporting.
Prior to his tenure at WSB-TV, Bojorquez had served since 2002 as a general assignment reporter for KNXV-TV in Phoenix, Arizona. In both 2004 and 2005, he won The Associated Press award for best live reporting for his coverage of the state's wildfires. In July 2006, he traveled to Mexico City to cover Mexico's presidential election, and also provided daily online articles and photo essays of the election.
Bojorquez began his career in journalism in 2000 as a general assignment reporter for KESQ-TV in Palm Springs, California, immediately after he graduated magna cum laude from the University of Southern California, where he was named Outstanding Broadcast Journalism Student of the Year.
One 15-year-old is fleeing gang violence in Honduras with nothing but a plastic bag of his clothes, hoping to get to his sister in Houston
Even without the use of his legs, Aaron Fotheringham won't be slowed down, or kept on the ground
American who was held hostage by Colombian rebels for five years describes the reintegration process for freed captives
After air conditioning at San Antonio's AT&T Center shut down, the heat eventually claimed the biggest star in the game
Isaiah Austin's height will give him a big advantage in the NCAA tournament; but he got there by overcoming an obstacle that might have ruined his career
Small town, with six waste-water disposal sites, records more than 30 earthquakes; residents demand answers
A week after recreational marijuana became legal, sales are booming and police say there have been no problems so far
In Minneapolis, Cathy Heying discovered car trouble can make people homeless, so she became a mechanic and opened a garage to help
NASA scientists take flight to find clues to learning more about earth's mysterious atmosphere
One Texas resident had no problem enrolling through federal website, a big difference from two months ago, but another still encountered problems
Wintry mix hits Northeast, causing flight delays and cancellations, making roads slick and dangerous
Ranchers in the Black Hills are tallying their losses while Washington remains shut down
Texas voters haven't put a Democrat in statewide office in nearly 20 years, but the demographics are changing
Rep. Steve Southerland is expecting a competitive race in 2014, which could be further complicated by his vote on intervention in Syria
Firefighters say the Rim Fire is now 20 percent contained, but it grew by 30,000 acres overnight and remains erratic