Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Tom Jarriel

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Years active
  
1956-2002

Political party
  
Democratic Party

Spouse
  
Joan Jarriel (m. 1957)


Role
  
Reporter

Name
  
Tom Jarriel

TV shows
  
20/20

Tom Jarriel wwwnndbcompeople537000049390tomjarrieljpg

Born
  
December 29, 1934 (age 89) (
1934-12-29
)
LaGrange, Georgia, U.S.

Alma mater
  
C.E. Byrd High School University of Houston

Occupation
  
Journalist with KPRC-TV and ABC News

Children
  
Michael Thomas Jarriel Stephen L. Jarriel Jeffrey David Jarriel

Parent(s)
  
William Lester and Ella Ruth Jarriel

Education
  
University of Houston, C. E. Byrd High School

Awards
  
News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Continuing Coverage of a News Story – Long Form

Nominations
  
WGA Award for Best Documentary - Current Events - Television

Pilgrim state hospital ny tom jarriel pt1


Thomas Edwin "Tom" Jarriel (pronounced "Jair-ell," with a silent "i"; born December 29, 1934) is a retired American television news reporter who worked for the ABC network from 1964 to 2002.

Jarriel's parents were the late William Lester Jarriel, Sr., and Ella Ruth Jarriel. They had six children, including Tom. In 1947, the family moved to Shreveport, where Jarriel graduated in 1952 from C.E. Byrd High School. In 1956, he earned a Bachelor of Science degree at the University of Houston. He first worked at television station KPRC-TV, the NBC affiliate in Houston. In 1965, Jarriel joined ABC, first based at the network's southern bureau in Atlanta, Georgia. While there, he attracted national notice for his coverage of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.

Shortly afterward, he became White House correspondent for ABC, during the administrations of U.S. Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. Later, in 1977, Jarriel co-anchored ABC Evening News on Saturdays for two years, and in 1979, joined the network's newsmagazine 20/20, as an investigative correspondent. On that show and on several hour-long documentaries, he covered subjects such as the defects in the American criminal justice system, wasteful spending by the United States Department of Defense, and transportation accidents. He received severalEmmy Awards for his work.

During most of that time, Jarriel anchored the 15-minute bulletins ABC aired late nights on Saturday and Sunday, until those broadcasts were cancelled in 1991; he was also the most frequent anchor of the daytime ABC News Brief updates that aired during the era. He also served as substitute anchor on World News Tonight.

He retired from broadcasting in 2002.

References

Tom Jarriel Wikipedia