Veteran CBS News correspondent Bob Simon, whose decades-long career included covering major overseas conflicts and surviving Iraqi prison, was killed in a car accident on Wednesday in New York City, police and CBS said. He was 73.
A longtime member of the network’s 60 Minutes on-air team, Simon was a passenger in a hired car that slammed into a Mercedes Benz and then hit metal lane barriers on Manhattan’s West Side at about 6.45am, New York City police said.
Simon suffered injuries to his head and torso and was pronounced dead on arrival at Saint Luke’s Roosevelt Hospital, police said.
The 44-year-old driver of the hired car was in a stable condition at Bellevue Hospital with injuries to his arms and legs. The driver of the Mercedes was not injured.
No arrests have been made and police were investigating the crash.
Prominent journalists and producers were swift to pay tribute to Simon both online and on-air.
“Bob was for the last five decades simply one of the best, in my opinion the best, in the world at getting a story, telling a story, writing a story, and making it simply unforgettable,” said an emotional Anderson Cooper on Wednesday night’s broadcast of CNN’s Anderson Cooper 360.
“He was a warrior poet who loved life and loved people,” he added.
The award-winning newsman’s career spanned five decades, from covering the Vietnam War to a piece on 60 Minutes last weekend about the Oscar-nominated civil rights drama Selma.
Tall, lanky and possessed of an erudite demeanor on camera, Simon covered most major overseas conflicts from the 1960s to the present and has been a regular contributor to the weekly news magazine on CBS since 1996.
The 2014-15 season was his 19th on the weekly Sunday night broadcast. He also was a correspondent on all seven seasons of ‘60 Minutes II’ until that show ended in 2005.
He earned 27 Emmy awards for reporting during his career, and won electronic journalism’s highest honour, the Alfred I. DuPont-Columbia University Award, for the piece Shame of Srebrencia, a 60 Minutes II report on genocide during the Bosnian War.
His Emmy awards included domestic stories as well as reporting from Vietnam, Lebanon, Cambodia, Saudi Arabia, India and China.
They also included several Emmys for his work on 60 Minutes, including “Curveball”, an investigation into an Iraqi defector whose testimony eventually led America to war.
At the start of the Gulf War in January 1991, Simon was part of a CBS News team that spent 40 days in Iraqi prisons after being captured by Iraqi forces near the Saudi-Kuwaiti border.
Two years later, after writing about his experience in his book Forty Days, he returned to Baghdad to cover the US bombing of Iraq.
Reuters