Ray Sánchez is an award-winning multimedia editor and writer who has covered national news, Latin America and the Caribbean for more than two decades.
Based in CNN's New York Bureau since 2013, Ray has written about topics ranging from the national debate over police conduct to the historic shift in US-Cuba relations to the Ebola outbreak.
Ray lived and worked as a correspondent in Havana for nearly three years, chronicling life in Cuba after Fidel Castro stepped down. He is coauthor of "The Duke of Havana," a book about the politics of baseball on the island.
His more than a decade as a senior writer, columnist and sports writer for New York Newsday included a four-year stint as Mexico City-based correspondent covering conflicts, economics and politics throughout Latin America and the Caribbean, reports on terrorism from New York to London and dispatches from the war in Iraq.
A member of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize finalist team for Newsday's coverage of the New York blackout, Ray has also written for The Huffington Post, Reuters, Al Jazeera America and The Nation Institute's Investigative Fund.
He was an adjunct lecturer in journalism at City College of New York and co-winner of the Mike Berger Award for writing about New York from Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism.
Born in Manatí, Puerto Rico, and raised in the Bronx, Ray is a graduate of New York University and lives in Manhattan.