The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘A giant of broadcast journalism’

Assignment­s took CBS reporter from Vietnam to ‘Selma.’

- By Tom McElroy

NEW YORK — Longtime “60 Minutes” correspond­ent Bob Simon, who covered most major overseas conflicts and news stories since the late 1960s during a five-decade career in journalism, has died in a car crash. He was 73.

Simon was among a handful of elite journalist­s, a “reporter’s reporter,” according to his executive producer, whose assignment­s took him from the Vietnam War to the Oscar-nominated movie “Selma.” He spent years as a foreign correspond­ent for CBS News, particular­ly in the Middle East, where he was held captive for more than a month in Iraq in 1991.

“Bob Simon was a giant of broadcast journalism, and a dear friend to everyone in the CBS News family,” CBS News President David Rhodes said in a statement. “We are all shocked by this tragic, sudden loss.”

A Lincoln Town Car in which Simon was a passenger Wednesday night hit another car stopped at a Manhattan traffic light and then slammed into metal barriers separating traffic lanes, police said. Simon and the Town Car’s driver were taken to a hospital, where Simon was pronounced dead.

Police said Thursday that Simon was not wearing a seatbelt. They are not required in livery vehicles and it is a common practice not to use them.

The Town Car driver suffered injuries to his legs and arms. The driver of the other car was uninjured. No arrests were made, said police, who continued to investigat­e the deadly accident.

“CBS Evening News” anchor Scott Pelley, his eyes red, announced the death in a special report.

“We have some sad news from within our CBS News family,” Pelley said. “Our colleague Bob Simon was killed this evening.”

“Vietnam is where he first began covering warfare, and he gave his firsthand reporting from virtually every major battlefiel­d around the world since,” Pelley said.

Simon had been contributi­ng to “60 Minutes” on a regular basis since 1996. He also was a correspond­ent for “60 Minutes II.”

He was preparing a report on the Ebola virus and the search for a cure for this Sunday’s “60 Minutes” broadcast. He had been working on the project with his daughter, Tanya Simon, a producer with whom he collaborat­ed on several stories.

Anderson Cooper, who does occasional stories for “60 Minutes,” was near tears talking about Simon’s death. He said that when Simon presented a story “you knew it was going to be something special.”

Correspond­ent Steve Kroft said the entire “60 Minutes” team was shak- en by Simon’s death.

“He was a great writer, he was a wonderful colleague, he was a gutsy reporter, a true gentleman and really a stylish, old-school journalist who knew the Middle East as well as any reporter on the map,” Kroft said Thursday.

“Nobody could replicate him. Nobody could do it his way,” said “60 Minutes” correspond­ent Lara Logan. “He had that unique touch that people just loved.”

Jeff Fager, executive producer of “60 Minutes,” said in a statement, “It is such a tragedy made worse because we lost him in a car accident, a man who has escaped more difficult situations than almost any journalist in modern times. Bob was a reporter’s reporter.”

Simon joined CBS News in 1967 as a reporter and assignment editor, covering campus unrest and inner-city riots, CBS said. He also worked in CBS’ Tel Aviv bureau from 1977 to 1981 and in Washington, D.C., as its Department of State correspond­ent.

Simon’s career in war reporting began in Viet- nam, and he was on one of the last helicopter­s out of Saigon when the U.S. withdrew in 1975. At the outset of the Gulf War in January 1991, Simon was captured by Iraqi forces near the Saudi-Kuwaiti border. CBS said he and three other members of CBS News’ coverage team spent 40 days in Iraqi prisons, an experience Simon wrote about in his book “Forty Days.”

Simon returned to Baghdad in January 1993 to cover the American bombing of Iraq.

He won numerous awards, including his fourth Peabody and an Emmy for his story from Central Africa on the world’s only all-black symphony in 2012. Another story about an orchestra in Paraguay, one whose poor members constructe­d their instrument­s from trash, won him his 27th Emmy, perhaps the most held by a journalist for field reporting, CBS said.

Simon was born May 29, 1941, in the Bronx. He graduated from Brandeis University in 1962 with a degree in history. He is survived by his wife, his daughter and a grandson.

 ?? KATHY WILLENS / AP ?? A police officer tows a car after an accident in New York on Wednesday that killed longtime “60 Minutes” correspond­ent Bob Simon.
KATHY WILLENS / AP A police officer tows a car after an accident in New York on Wednesday that killed longtime “60 Minutes” correspond­ent Bob Simon.
 ??  ?? CBS’ Bob Simon won numerous awards, including four Peabodys and 27 Emmys.
CBS’ Bob Simon won numerous awards, including four Peabodys and 27 Emmys.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States