Tom Jarriel, Globetrotting ABC News Reporter, Is Dead at 89

By The New York Times (World News) | Created at 2024-10-27 15:15:10 | Updated at 2024-10-27 17:25:51 2 hours ago
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Media|Tom Jarriel, Globetrotting ABC News Reporter, Is Dead at 89

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/27/business/media/tom-jarriel-dead.html

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In his 37 years at the network, he was a White House correspondent, weekend anchor and correspondent for “20/20.” He won 19 Emmy Awards.

Tom Jarriel, wearing a suit and a tie with a small microphone attached to it, sits at a desk. Both hands are on the desk, and he holds a pen in his right hand.
Tom Jarriel on the ABC News program “World News Tonight” in 1979. He joined the network’s newsmagazine “20/20” that same year. Credit...Joe McNally/American Broadcasting Companies, via Getty Images

Richard Sandomir

Oct. 27, 2024, 11:09 a.m. ET

Tom Jarriel, a globetrotting, Emmy-winning reporter who was best known for his work on the ABC newsmagazine “20/20” but also served as the network’s chief White House correspondent and weekend news anchor, died on Thursday at a nursing facility in Annapolis, Md. He was 89.

His death was confirmed by his son Steve, who said he had a debilitating stroke last year.

Mr. Jarriel started at “20/20” in 1979 — a year after it went on the air — and was there for 23 years. His subjects included the child victims of the civil war in Mozambique (including a 9-year-old boy forced by rebels to burn down his own house), the return of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia and famine in Ethiopia.

“We did not do happy stories together,” Janice Tomlin, his longtime producer, said in an interview. “You had to be in serious trouble for Tom and I to do a story on you."

He considered the defining story of his career to be a series of reports over a decade on the thousands of forgotten, abused and malnourished orphans in Romania. He and Ms. Tomlin found them naked and warehoused in orphanages — some of them dying, others with flies all over them, and others in primitive institutions for what Mr. Jarriel said were unsalvageable children.

“In more than 50 institutions hidden in remote areas of Romania, innocent children are locked away like condemned prisoners,” Mr. Jarriel said in one of two reports broadcast in 1990. “These are not the orphanages seen before on American television. These are state-run asylums shrouded in secrecy. This is where children with physical or mental defects are banished by a government which has branded them worthless.”

Ms. Tomlin recalled: “We found children in cages, with their heads shaved, four to a crib, some in straitjackets. It was like Auschwitz. The children were dying from malnutrition and fixable things.”


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