Cullen Browder Biography

Cullen Browder is a multiple Emmy award-winner whose reporting has garnered state, regional and national awards.

Cullen investigative reports have won awards from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, The Associated Press, Radio Television Digital News Association and the National E9-1-1 Institute.

He has been recognized by The Washington Post as one of the best state capitol reporters in America.

His’s first job out of college was on a fish processing ship in Alaska. He had always wanted to see Alaska and craved an adventure.

So, he off-loaded, sorted, cleaned, weighed and packaged black cod and salmon for summer, traveling around the Aleutian Islands. He then rode from Anchorage to San Diego on a motorcycle.

Cullen Browder Age

Cullen is a multiple Emmy award-winner whose reporting has garnered state, regional and national awards. He was born in Cleveland, Tenn. “hometown: Athens, Tenn.” His actual age is under review and will be updated soon.

Cullen Browder Family

Cullen received Bachelor of Arts in Speech Communication, 1986, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He has not shared his parents and siblings details. The information is under review and will be updated soon.

Cullen Browder Wife

He is married to his wife Ela. The couple has two kids; son, Michael; daughter, Elizabeth.

Cullen Browder Net Worth

Cullen has been honored to work on stories that lead to change in state government. He is privileged to tell the stories of people battling Alzheimer’s and homelessness.

Browder always amazed to see the courage and resilience of people in the face of great adversity. His estimated Net Worth as of 2019 is under review and will be updated soon.

Cullen Browder Wral

Cullen Browder Recent Articles

Lawmakers unlikely to put money into expanding crime victims’ rights

wral.com — By Cullen Browder, WRAL anchor/reporterRaleigh, N.C. — A constitutional amendment North Carolina voters approved last fall to protect the rights of crime victims takes effect in less than three months, but lawmakers still haven’t approved funding for it or provided law enforcement any guidance to implement it.

Surveyor dropped Duke Energy easement from map before Johnston neighborhood built

wral.com — By Cullen Browder, WRAL anchor/reporterZebulon, N.C. — Close to 20 homes in a Johnston County neighborhood should never have been built, but a transmission line easement across the properties was left off plat maps before the neighborhood was developed.

Homeowners in the Buffalo Creek subdivision near Zebulon started receiving letters from Duke Energy two years ago informing them their homes, or part of their land, are on property owned by the utility company.

Amputee vet awarded disability — but it amounts to around $200 extra a month

wral.com — By Cullen Browder, WRAL anchor/reporterRaleigh, N.C. — Ron Mayo’s odyssey through the disability maze in the Department of Veterans Affairs started with a case of plantar fasciitis. Mayo, a veteran of the 82nd Airborne Division, got a cortisone shot in his left foot at the Fayetteville VA Medical Center in December 2011.

The foot then became infected, and he was airlifted to Carolinas Medical Center in Concord, where he ended up on life support.

Amputee vet awarded disability — but it amounts to around $200 a month

wral.com — By Cullen Browder, WRAL Investigates reporter Ron Mayo’s odyssey through the disability maze in the Department of Veterans Affairs started with a case of plantar fasciitis. Mayo, a veteran of the 82nd Airborne Division, got a cortisone shot in his left foot at the Fayetteville VA Medical Center in December 2011.

The foot then became infected, and he was airlifted to Carolinas Medical Center in Concord, where he ended up on life support.

Lawsuit: Republican legislators lied about election maps

wral.com — By Travis Fain, WRAL statehouse reporterRaleigh, N.C. — An advocacy group suing General Assembly leaders over state election maps accused those leaders and their legal team Thursday of lying to a federal judge and the public, saying documents from a cache of computerized files prove the lies.

The files come from computer drives that once belonged to Tom Hofeller, a Republican mapmaker who worked on North Carolina’s contested maps and congressional maps in other states.

Raleigh investment adviser found guilty in Ponzi scheme

wral.com — By Cullen Browder, WRAL anchor/reporterRaleigh, N.C. — A Raleigh investment adviser accused of bilking people out of more than $15 million in an elaborate Ponzi scheme was found guilty Thursday on all counts.

Raleigh investment adviser accused of Ponzi scheme says former clients, employees lied

wral.com — By Cullen Browder, WRAL anchor/reporterRaleigh, N.C. — A Raleigh investment adviser facing charges that he bilked people out of more than $15 million in an elaborate Ponzi scheme says he never intended to cheat anyone.

Federal authorities allege that Stephen Condon Peters, who owns VisionQuest Wealth Management, promised investors returns of 8 to 9 percent a year on low-risk investments.

Raleigh investment adviser says he never intended to dupe clients

wral.com — By Cullen Browder, WRAL anchor/reporterRaleigh, N.C. — A Raleigh investment adviser facing charges that he bilked people out of more than $15 million in an elaborate Ponzi scheme says he never intended to cheat anyone.

Federal authorities allege that Stephen Condon Peters, who owns VisionQuest Wealth Management, promised investors returns of 8 to 9 percent a year on low-risk investments.

Raleigh day care’s license suspended after infant chokes to death on pinecone

wral.com — By Cullen Browder and Mark Boyle, WRAL reporters, and Natalie Matthews, WRAL digital journalistRaleigh, N.C. — The operating license for a Raleigh day care center has been suspended, pending an investigation, after a 10-month-old boy choked on a pinecone and died at the facility Wednesday morning, authorities said.

The state Department of Health and Human Services confirmed to WRAL News that agency officials notified the center of the action via a letter to operator Antoinette Rochelle.

Raleigh daycare’s license suspended after infant chokes to death on pinecone

wral.com — By Cullen Browder and Mark Boyle, WRAL reporters, and Natalie Matthews, WRAL digital journalistRaleigh, N.C. — The operating license for a Raleigh day care center has been suspended, pending an investigation after a 10-month-old boy choked on a pinecone and died at the facility Wednesday morning, authorities said.

The state Department of Health and Human Services confirmed to WRAL News that they notified the center of the action via a letter to operator Antoinette Rochelle.

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