Jack is a journalist, former CIA Officer and former prosecuting attorney. Jack represents the next generation of journalists who embrace new media from video, audio, print and other forms of electronic media. And his expertise clearly sets him apart.While Jack works as a freelance journalist, he has appeared on MSNBC, NBC Nightly News, Fox News Channel, C-SPAN, NPR, and just about everywhere else. His goal has always been and will continue to be to go where the stories are happening and to provide the most in-depth reporting available.Jack has reported and broadcast programs from around the world including Darfur, Kosovo, Israel, Palestine, Kuwait, Iraq, Egypt, Turkey, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, England, Germany, Italy and the United Nations. However, he has also reported from the White House, the U.S. Senate, and the areas most impacted by Hurricane Katrina. Of course, Jack will be at both the Republican and Democratic National Conventions.
Jack Rice reporting from in front of the Haitian Palais de Justice in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. As infrastructure collapses, including justice, what happens next.
Jack Rice reporting from in front of the Haitian Presidential Palace in Port-au-Prince, Haiti about the one million homeless and the challenge they face.
There were 50,000 orphans in Haiti before the earthquake. Afterward? Jack Rice reports from an orphanage in Port-au-Prince, Haiti about the fate of so many.
With the massive earthquake that hit Port au Prince, it was the man made failure that killed the vast majority of the more than 200,000.
With 1 million homeless because of the earthquake, and with the oncoming rains, the death toll will undoubtedly rise.
With a lack of infrastructure before the earthquake, Haiti is much different than Katrina.
I was reporting inside of a Doctors without Borders camp when I came across a Canadian Medivac team trying to help a patient.
Maya, a former child slave, known as a Restavek, from Haiti talks about his life and how he was able to turn it around.
Maya, a former child slave, known as a Restavek, from Haiti talks about his life and how he was able to turn it around.
With a serious earthquake and continuing aftershocks, it is not much fun sleeping inside a building already severely damaged by the quake.