Henry Schuster has been an award-winning producer for 60 Minutes since 2007. He has covered uninsured Americans, the 2008 financial crisis, a Marine unit in Afghanistan and their return home five years later, as well as the rise of ISIS, Russian corruption, Chinese espionage, life inside Supermax, and the Sandy Hook families. He has also conducted five interviews with the chair of the Federal Reserve and reported on the attempt to undermine the 2020 election.
He won a Peabody Award in 2008 for Lifeline, a report about efforts to bring free health care to uninsured and underinsured Americans. The story led to a congressional hearing about health insurance, where the report was played in full before a House committee. Afterward, providing health care to the uninsured became a central plank of the Obama Administration's policy agenda.
Schuster previously worked at CNN and graduated from the University of Cambridge. He is also the author of Hunting Eric Rudolph, which is a book on domestic terrorism.