Andrés R.

Andrés R. is an editor for The New York Times, based in Seoul, responsible for breaking news coverage. He leads a team of reporters and editors who stay on top of breaking news while readers are asleep in the United States, focusing on updating the biggest U.S. stories and covering anything new happening in Asia, Europe, the Middle East and Africa. His team covers the day's top news like wars in Ukraine and Gaza but also looks for other stories that are trending, quirky, fun or thought-provoking. Andrés has been a journalist for nearly two decades, reporting from across the United States and more than a dozen countries on four continents. Before coming to The Times, he ran the internship program at The Wall Street Journal and spent 13 years at Bloomberg News as a reporter, editor, and bureau chief. He started his career as a crime reporter in McAllen, Texas, at The Monitor newspaper on the border with Mexico. Andrés graduated from New York University in 2005.

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The Daily's Verdict

This author is known for its high journalistic standards. The author strives to maintain neutrality and transparency in its reporting, and avoids conflicts of interest. The author has a reputation for accuracy and rarely gets contradicted on major discrepancies in its reporting.

Bias

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No current examples available.

Conflicts of Interest

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Contradictions

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Deceptions

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Recent Articles

Over 280 Protesters Arrested at Columbia and City College, Over a Quarter Had No Institutional Affiliation; NYPD Officer Accidentally Discharges Firearm During Protests, No Injuries Reported

Over 280 Protesters Arrested at Columbia and City College, Over a Quarter Had No Institutional Affiliation; NYPD Officer Accidentally Discharges Firearm During Protests, No Injuries Reported

Broke On: Friday, 03 May 2024 During protests at Columbia University and City College of New York on May 3, 2024, over 280 people were arrested by the NYPD. Over a quarter of those arrested at Columbia and over sixty percent at City College had no institutional affiliation. An NYPD officer accidentally discharged his gun inside Hamilton Hall at Columbia University while transitioning his firearm during the removal of pro-Palestinian protesters, resulting in no injuries.