David C Adams
Senior Editor, Univision News
David Adams is a Senior Editor at Univision News, responsible for English language content. He was previously Miami bureau chief for Thomson Reuters, leading coverage of the Southeast US and Caribbean.
British-born, Adams came to the United States in the summer of 1992 after five years as a freelance correspondent in Central America. He spent 15 years as the Miami-based Latin America correspondent of the Tampa Bay Times, Florida’s largest newspaper. During a career spanning four decades he has covered the civil wars in Central America, the U.S. invasion of Panama, the Zapatista uprising in Mexico and other historic events in Cuba and Haiti as well as U.S. politics and immigration issues.
In 2002, Adams was awarded the Maria Moors Cabot prize by Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism for outstanding reporting on Latin America and commitment to Inter-American understanding. His twin, Paul Adams, is an award-winning correspondent for the BBC.
No permitan que Maduro "robe" el oro de Venezuela: el inusual pedido de la oposición a un banco
Políticos exiliados argumentan que al presidente de ese país no se le pueden confiar las reservas de 14 toneladas que están en el Banco de Inglaterra. Dicen que pertenece al pueblo.
LO MÁS RECIENTE

Don’t let Maduro “steal” gold, opposition asks British bank
Opposition leaders have asked the Bank of England not to let the Venezuelan president have access to the country's gold reserves held in its vault, saying it belongs to the people.

The ant and the elephant: China's president visits Panama
Xi Jinping is the first Chinese president to visit Panama and his arrival comes as the Asian giant is spreading its influence across Latin America. Some question its motives in tiny Panama, and the future neutrality of the Panama Canal.

La hormiguita y el elefante: la estrategia del presidente de China con Panamá
Xi Jinping es el primer mandatario chino que visita Panamá y su llegada se produce en momentos en que el gigante asiático está ampliando su influencia en América Latina. Algunos cuestionan sus motivos en la pequeña nación y la neutralidad futura del Canal de Panamá.

¿Quién se queda con los miles de millones robados de Venezuela incautados en Estados Unidos?
Los fiscales estadounidenses argumentan que la complicidad del gobierno de Venezuela en la conspiración hace que la restitución de esos fondos sea "inapropiada", según documentos judiciales.

Who gets to keep Venezuela's billions after assets seized in U.S.?
U.S. officials argue that the government of Venezuela's complicity in corruption makes restitution of funds "inappropriate," according to court documents.

Presentan cargos por narcotráfico contra el hermano del presidente de Honduras
El excongresista hondureño Juan Antonio "Tony" Hernández está acusado de traficar "cargas de cocaína de varias toneladas" a Estados Unidos durante más de una década.










