Born in San Diego,
Calif., Tammy Leitner currently works as a crime
writer in Mesa, Arizona. She earned a bachelor's
degree in English from the University of California,
Los Angeles, and a master's degree in journalism
from Boston University in Massachusetts.
Leitner has earned multiple Arizona and New
York state awards for crime reporting, including
one for a first-person account of the time she
spent behind bars "doing time" with
the same criminals she wrote about for a Corning,
New York, newspaper. She received an Arizona
Press Club Award for coverage of legendary mob
informant Sammy "The Bull" Gravano's
arrest in Arizona. She has covered Nelson Mandela's
Congressional Gold Medal ceremony, Hillary Clinton's
Senate run and, most recently, the Arizona angle
on the terrorist attacks (two of the hijackers
learned to fly at a Scottsdale flight school
and one lived in Mesa).
Proving she'll do anything to get a story,
Leitner once burst into a burning building and,
in another instance, worked as a member of a
NASCAR pit crew. In 1999, Leitner was honored
by the City of Scottsdale, Arizona, for saving
a drowning man. She is currently writing a true
crime book about a serial rapist who evaded
police for 16 years during a multi-state spree.
Leitner's hobbies include running, biking,
lifting weights, kickboxing, camping, photography
and traveling. She is engaged to Mike, her boyfriend
of four years, and likes to spend time with
her beloved 140-pound Newfoundland, Bacchus.
Her birth date is July 3.