Edmonton Journal

Journalist covered Supreme Court

Co-wrote book about death penalty cases

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Tim O'brien, a broadcast journalist and lawyer who covered the Supreme Court for ABC-TV for 22 years and co-wrote a book on its notable capital cases, died Monday in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. He was 77.

He had been riding a bicycle and waiting on a sidewalk for a traffic light to change when he was struck by a truck that had veered off the road after an accident, police said.

Early in his career, O'brien was weekend anchor and a general assignment reporter for Washington's WTOP-TV from 1969 to 1972. He was then a television anchor in New Orleans until 1977, when he returned to Washington and began covering the high court for ABC.

After retiring from the network in 2000, he was a CNN journalist and participat­ed in the coverage of the 9/11 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington. Later he was a regular contributo­r to a religion and ethics program on PBS.

Timothy Andrew O'brien was born in New York City on July 11, 1943. He received a law degree in 1976.

With longtime ABC News colleague Martin Clancy, O'brien was an author in 2013 of Murder at the Supreme Court: Lethal Crimes and Landmark Cases, a book that examined the court's handling of death penalty cases, including the details of the crimes that led to the death penalty. For their research, they visited execution chambers and sat in electric chairs (with the electricit­y turned off ).

“Unsparing journalist­ic prose grounds accompanyi­ng events in stark, gruesome facts underlying these precedent- setting cases,” a Publisher's Weekly critic wrote in a review. “The result is an odd but effective mix of stomach-turning true crime stories and sophistica­ted analyses of Supreme Court decisions.”

During his years as a Supreme Court reporter, O'brien was often detached to help cover other major news events, including the trial of President Ronald Reagan's would-be assassin, John Hinckley, and congressio­nal hearings into Iran-contra scandal.

A resident of Kensington, Md., O'brien spent winters in recent years in Ponte Vedra Beach. Survivors include his wife of 49 years, Guadalupe “Petie” Moreno O'brien; two children; a twin brother; and five grandchild­ren.

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Tim O'brien

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