San Diego Union-Tribune

FORMER U.S. ATTORNEY GENERAL, PA. GOVERNOR

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Dick Thornburgh, who as Pennsylvan­ia governor won plaudits for his cool handling of the 1979 Three Mile Island crisis and as U.S. attorney general restored credibilit­y to a Justice Department hurt by the Iran-Contra scandal, has died. He was 88.

Thornburgh died Thursday morning at a retirement community facility outside Pittsburgh, his son David said. The cause is not yet known. He suffered a mild stroke in June 2014.

Thornburgh built his reputation as a crime-busting federal prosecutor in Pittsburgh and as a moderate Republican governor. As the nation’s top law enforcemen­t official, he prosecuted the savings and loan scandal. He also shepherded the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act; one of his sons had been severely brain damaged in an auto accident.

After leaving public office, Thornburgh became a go-to troublesho­oter who helped CBS investigat­e its news practices, dissected illegaliti­es at telecommun­ications company WorldCom and tried to improve the United Nations’ efficiency.

“I’ve always had an opportunit­y to right a vessel that was somewhat listing and taking on water,” he told The Associated Press in 1999. “I wouldn’t object to being characteri­zed as a ‘Mr. Fix It.’ I’ve liked the day-in, day-out challenges of governance.”

President Ronald Reagan appointed Thornburgh attorney general in the waning months of his administra­tion. Thornburgh succeeded the embattled Edwin Meese III, who was investigat­ed by a special prosecutor for possible ethics violations, and his appointmen­t in August 1988 was hailed on Capitol Hill as an opportunit­y to restore the agency’s morale and image.

He was asked to stay on as attorney general when George H.W. Bush became president in 1989.

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