John Moroney

John Moroney joined NBC 10 Boston and necn in April 2004 as a general assignment reporter from WFSB TV-3, the CBS affiliate in Connecticut, where he was a general assignment reporter and the Chief Political Reporter for the station.

He is a seasoned and award-winning journalist, having more than two decades of broadcast and print experience. He has reported on a wide range of issues, including national presidential campaigns, the aftermath of Sept. 11, the Rhode Island Station nightclub fire, the Catholic Church crisis, same sex marriage in Massachusetts, the Big Dig and the Entwhistle murders.

John received his bachelor's degree from Northeastern University and master's degree from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, where he was awarded the John M. Patterson Prize for Nightly News.

Prior to joining NBC 10 Boston and necn, he worked as a reporter for WFSB TV-3 and NBC affiliate WWLP-TV 22 in Springfield, as well as an anchor and managing editor for the MediaOne cable news network.

John also worked for several years as a print reporter and editor for daily and weekly newspapers in Massachusetts. During his career, he has received several awards from the New England Press Association.

A native of Acton, Massachusetts, he lives in the Greater Boston area with his wife and two children.

The Latest

  • BOSTON, MA – APRIL 23:  Police close a barricade along a still closed section of Boylston Street near the site of the Boston Marathon bombings on April 23, 2013 in Boston, Massachusetts . Business owners and residents of the closed section were allowed to return to their properties today while under escort of city staff.
    Massachusetts Jan 2

    What the Boston Marathon bombing taught us about safety at public events

    The deadly violence on New Year’s Day in New Orleans has dredged up memories of the 2013 Boston Marathon bombings in Boston. Fourteen people were killed when a car plowed through a New Year’s crowd in New Orleans. Authorities say the driver was inspired by foreign terrorists. The marathon bombers, who killed three people and injured dozens of others, were...

  • mbta Dec 20, 2024

    T will be free of slow zones for the first time in decades

    The MBTA will be entirely free of slow zones starting Saturday, with the agency’s Track Improvement Program coming to a close. ”We did the equivalent of 40 years of work in one year if we tried to do this on our normal overnights or day orders,” Phillip Eng, the T’s general manager. The Track Improvement Program started more than a...

  • Boston City Hall
    Boston Dec 16, 2024

    Boston City Hall, despite reputation for being ugly, may gain landmark status

    Boston City Hall is iconic, despite strong beliefs on all sides about how it looks. Built in 1968, City Hall is an internationally known example of brutalism, a style that uses concrete and was born out of the desire for increased civic engagement. Its appearance generated controversy over the years among residents and the elected officials who work there. In...

  • Massachusetts Dec 9, 2024

    Revere police officer placed on leave after OUI crash

    A police officer in Revere, Massachusetts, has been placed on administrative leave following his arrest on a drunken driving charge after he crashed his vehicle into a retaining wall on Sunday morning. Revere police said Officer Matteo Velasquez was placed on administrative leave after the crash. Police responded to a report of a crash on Cushman Avenue around 6:12 a.m....

  • A close-up image of a snow plow.
    Winter storm Dec 3, 2024

    Will we get snow? It's what everyone in Boston wants to know

    We drove around the Boston area Tuesday, ahead of the first winter storm of the season, and found plenty of anticipation. Snow is already on the ground at the Nashoba Valley Ski Area in Westford. “The weather can do just about anything, but we always hope for the best,” said Al Fletcher, of Nashoba Valley. With Christmas several weeks away,...

  • Massachusetts Dec 2, 2024

    Heating costs expected to rise for many this winter

    The cold weather has arrived, marking the official start of the home heating season. It’s a constant battle to keep energy costs down in the winter, and this year is no exception. Albert Choy uses natural gas to heat his home. In the winter, he spends and about $500 a month and doesn’t anticipate this year will be much different....

  • Photo of Jeremy Cole, courtesy of Endicott College Police Department. The 49-year-old police sergeant was hit by a wrong-way driver on I-95 in Newbury early Thursday, sustaining fatal injuries.
    Massachusetts Nov 30, 2024

    ‘Unimaginable loss': Endicott police sgt. remembered for his kindness

    49-year-old Jeremy Cole — a husband, father of four and an Endicott College police sergeant — was killed in a wrong-way crash on I-95 in Newbury early on Thanksgiving morning

  • Massachusetts Nov 29, 2024

    Business booming at Mass. Christmas tree farms on Black Friday

    Forget Black Friday, it’s also Green Friday. The transition from Thanksgiving to Christmas is underway, and it’s evident at more than just shopping malls — it’s clear at Christmas tree farms around Massachusetts, including at the Taproot Tree Farm in Stow where business is booming despite the recent dry weather. Christmas trees help fuel a multi-million dollar industry here in...

  • Everett Nov 22, 2024

    9 arrests made in North Shore drug sweep, feds say

    Nine people were arrested on drug, child sex abuse and other charges in a sweep involving gang investigators on Massachusetts’ North Shore and on Nantucket Thursday, federal prosecutors said.

  • Balloons and a sign left at Ramsay Park in Boston on Monday, Nov. 18, 2024, in memory of Celia Simmons, who was fatally stabbed there two days earlier.
    Boston Nov 18, 2024

    Woman killed in daylight Boston park stabbing remembered

    Balloons and candles were left at the park in Boston’s South End where a 65-year-old woman was stabbed to death this weekend in broad daylight.

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