Jan Crawford Greenburg
Jan Crawford Greenburg
Jan Crawford Greenburg

Jan Crawford Greenburg
News Correspondent
Jan Crawford Greenburg is an ABC News Legal Correspondent based
in Washington, DC covering the Supreme Court and national legal
issues. She provides legal analysis for all ABC News
platforms.
Ms. Greenburg secured recent interviews with both Chief Justice
John G. Roberts, Jr. and Justice John Paul Stevens. In his first
television interview, Chief Justice Roberts discussed the court,
his views on the law, and life since taking office. Ms. Greenburg
sat down with 86-year old Justice John Paul Stevens for his first
network television ever. Justice Stevens reflected on his memories
of the man who appointed him to the Supreme Court in 1975, former
President Gerald R. Ford.
Ms. Greenburg's book on the Supreme Court, Supreme Conflict:
The Inside Story of the Struggle for Control of the United States
Supreme Court, was published in January 2007 by Penguin Press.
The book is a penetrating and unvarnished look at the making of the
current United States Supreme Court and a news-breaking account of
the coordinated campaign to move the Court in a more conservative
direction.
Prior to joining ABC, Ms. Greenburg was the national legal affairs
reporter for the Chicago Tribune, the Supreme Court correspondent
for The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer on PBS, and a legal
analyst for CBS' Evening News and Face the
Nation. She covered the Supreme Court and national legal
issues, including judicial appointments and confirmation
battles.
She began covering the Supreme Court for the Chicago Tribune in
1994. She became the NewsHour's Supreme Court analyst in
1998, where she provided live, gavel-to-gavel coverage on PBS of
the Supreme Court confirmation hearings of Chief Justice Roberts
and Justice Alito. Her exclusive reports and inside accounts of
those nominations received wide acclaim. In addition to her work on
the NewsHour and CBS, she has provided commentary on a
variety of legal issues for other network and cable news
programs.
Ms. Greenburg joined the Tribune in 1987, and began
covering legal affairs in 1993 after her graduation from the
University of Chicago Law School. She won the Tribune's
top reporting award in 2001, as part of a team of reporters who
covered the 2000 presidential election and the subsequent legal
battles over the White House. In 1996 she returned to Alabama,
where she grew up on a cattle farm, to report and write a 13-part
series on the South a generation after the civil rights movement.
Again, Ms. Greenburg won the Tribune's top reporting award
for her work.
A graduate from the University of Alabama in 1987, Ms. Greenburg
has taught journalism at American University and frequently speaks
about the court to universities, law schools, legal organizations
and civic groups across the country. She is a member of the New
York bar, and is married to Douglas Greenburg, a Chicago native and
attorney. They have four children and live in Washington, DC.