Chicago Sun-Times

Executive editor of CQ Roll Call

- BY CALVIN WOODWARD

WASHINGTON — Steven Komarow, CQ Roll Call’s executive editor and a longtime Associated Press and USA TODAY journalist steeped in the ways of Washington and war, has died at 61.

Mr. Komarow died in a hospital Sunday after a long illness complicate­d by a recent accident, his employer said.

The famously unflappabl­e Mr. Komarow spent nearly 20 years with the AP — 1978 to 1993 and 2006 to 2010— and rose to become deputy chief of the AP’s Washington bureau before leaving for Bloomberg News to steer defense, justice and White House coverage. In 2015, he joined CQ Roll Call as vice president and news director before his elevation a year later to executive editor and senior vice president. Mr. Komarow also worked for a dozen years for USA TODAY, covering wars in Afghanista­n and Iraq before returning to the AP as assistant and then deputy internatio­nal editor.

For all of Mr. Komarow’s accomplish­ments in journalism, one of the most indelible episodes of his career came when he served as an impromptu hostage negotiator in December 1982. That tested his imperturba­ble nature.

Then an AP reporter, Mr. Komarow was assigned to “swing by” the Washington Monument, where “I learned that a wacko in a dark blue jumpsuit and full- face motorcycle helmet had driven a white- panel truck up the path to the monument doorway,” he recounted in nowdefunct George magazine. “The truck was full of dynamite, the man claimed. There was no reason to doubt him.”

Norman D. Mayer, a nuclear disarmamen­t activist, had monument visitors trapped inside and demanded to speak face to face with a reporter who was single with no kids. Mr. Komarow, who then fit the bill, volunteere­d and visited him five times during the hourslong standoff, “trying to get him to relax and chat” and to turn the monument lights on at twilight. Mayer let the hostages go.

Mayer eventually tried to flee in his truck. Police snipers killed him. No explosives were found.

“Mayer seems less like a terrorist than a Don Quixote,” Mr. Komarow wrote in the 2007 piece. “Even in bluff, he avoided harm to anyone but himself.”

Retired AP journalist Mike Feinsilber said the only time he saw Mr. Komarow rattled was when he returned to the bureau after the episode and was asked to write a firstperso­n account. “Steve sat down to write, but his hand shook so much he ended up dictating the story to me,” Feinsilber said.

“Almost everyone mentions his calmness,” said John Daniszewsk­i, AP vice president and editor at large for standards. “He was calm, but with a gentle, ironic sense of humor and sharp intellect. So many AP journalist­s today think of him as their mentor.”

Mr. Komarow is survived by his wife, Stephanie, and daughters Cayla and Sasha.

 ?? LAWRENCE JACKSON/ AP ?? Steven Komarow once served as an impromptu hostage negotiator at theWashing­ton Monument.
LAWRENCE JACKSON/ AP Steven Komarow once served as an impromptu hostage negotiator at theWashing­ton Monument.

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