Melissa Hernandez
Follow Us
Melissa Hernandez was a member of the 2021-22 Los Angeles Times Fellowship class. She was born and raised in Miami and is a graduate of the University of Florida, where she studied journalism and environmental science. Previously, Hernandez was a summer intern for The Times in 2021, during which she covered general assignments on the Metro desk. Before arriving in California, she was an investigative/enterprise reporter for Fresh Take Florida, a news service offered by UF. Her previous work can be found in the Associated Press, U.S. News and World Report, Chicago Tribune and San Francisco Chronicle. Hernandez is a three-time Society of Professional Journalists award winner and her biggest passion is long-form investigative reporting. She’s an avid lover of golden retrievers and Rocky Road ice cream.
Latest From This Author
The Powerball jackpot is at $1.5 billion after no one won it Wednesday, making it the third-largest lottery prize in U.S. history. Next drawing is Saturday.
An Alabama man pretending to be a student at Stanford University was found to have been living in campus dorms for nearly 10 months, according to school officials.
The teenager is in serious condition after she was mauled by six large dogs in Thousand Oaks on Sunday, the Ventura County Fire Department said.
Kevin Brunner was arrested on Oct. 1 and accused of trying to burn his ex-girlfriend’s belongings in her apartment. As he tells it, he was trying to fight off a bear.
Holocaust Museum LA said it’s been the target of antisemitic hate after rapper Kanye West rejected the museum’s invitation for a private tour.
California voters planning to cast a ballot in the Nov. 8 midterm election have until 11:59 p.m. Monday to register online.
Landscapers found a car buried in the backyard of a $15-million mansion in Atherton on Thursday morning, prompting a police investigation.
Katerina Kurteeva removed 23 contact lenses lodged inside her patient’s eye after the woman came into her Orange County office complaining of eye pain and blurred vision.
A Sacramento woman allegedly collected more than $145,000 in unemployment benefits using the identities of two convicted killers, the state attorney general’s office announced.
Katerina Kurteeva removed 23 contact lenses lodged inside her patient’s eye after the woman came into her Orange County office complaining of eye pain and blurred vision.