Investigative Journalist
reporter  ~ producer  ~  documentarian ~  moderator 
 

Angela is a multi award-winning investigative and enterprise journalist based in Washington, D.C. She has worked for major news outlets including ABC News, Scripps News and The Washington Post. Her broadcast, documentary and digital work have been recognized through the recipient of honors including two Emmy awards, two Peabody awards, the George Polk award, the Robert F. Kennedy award, the Edward R. Murrow award and others. 


Angela most recently served as a senior video producer at The Washington Post, where she co-led a team of 10 video journalists who film, produce and edit enterprise and investigative stories, breaking news and multimedia projects. Angela’s expertise in investigative work was fundamental on such stories as “Built and Broken,” where she helped produce a twelve minute mini-documentary focusing on the exploitation of female athletes within the sport of bodybuilding and a mini-documentary looking at mental health emergencies calls that led to fatal police shootings. While at the Washington Post, Angela was instrumental in helping shape some of the organization's most distinguished enterprise projects.


Prior to joining the Post in 2021, Angela was a national investigative producer for the Scripps News Washington Bureau where she reported and produced a variety of national investigative stories including broken prescription drug monitoring systems that violated patient privacy and sexual assault in the military. She co-reported/produced a documentary on the breakdowns in federal and tribal criminal justice systems on Indian reservations that allowed sexual perpetrators to receive little or no punishment, as well as a documentary investigation into why mifepristone, also known as the abortion pill, has been one of the FDA’s most restricted drugs.


Angela was also an investigative producer for several years with ABC News Network in New York, New York where she pitched and produced stories for “World News Tonight,” “Good Morning America,” “Nightline,” “20/20” and abcnews.com. She was part of the team that investigated the murder of an American Peace Corps volunteer that uncovered systemic failures of the organization to protect volunteers. The story netted Hill two Emmy Awards and led to the Peace Corps Volunteer Protection Act being signed into law. She also produced stories on immigration including the deportation of undocumented immigrants that resulted in separation from their children.


Angela is a member of Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE) the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) and the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ). She is an alumna of INROADS.


In the Spring of 2024 Angela was named the Ida B. Wells Professor of Investigative Journalism at

Arizona State University's Cronkite School for Journalism - D.C. Campus. She previously served as an adjunct instructor of journalism in Georgetown University's Master's of Journalism program. 


Angela holds a M.A. on journalism from the City University of New York (CUNY) Graduate School of Journalism and a B.S. in Business Marketing from Georgetown University.


In her free time, Angela enjoys traveling, photography, comedy shows and being outdoors in nature. She's always on the lookout for a great vegan and vegetarian recipes.