Bob Simon, '60 Minutes' correspondent, killed in Manhattan car crash

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Thursday, February 12, 2015
bob simon
Television journalist Bob Simon attends the New York premiere of "The Railway Man" on Monday, April 7, 2014, in New York.
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NEW YORK -- CBS says "60 Minutes" correspondent and legendary journalist Bob Simon was killed in a car crash in New York Wednesday night.

Simon, 73, was the passenger in a town car that lost control and crashed into a pedestrian median on Manhattan's West Side around 7 p.m.

60 Minutes correspondent and legendary journalist Bob Simon was killed in a livery cab crash on the West Side.
Bob Simon killed in livery cab crash

Simon went into cardiac arrest and was rushed to St. Luke's Hospital where he later died.

One other person was taken to Bellevue Hospital with non-life threatening injuries.

Simon was among a handful of elite journalists to cover most major overseas conflicts and news stories since the late 1960s, CBS said. He covered stories including the Vietnam War and the Oscar-nominated movie "Selma" in a career spanning five decades.

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

Simon won numerous awards, including his fourth Peabody and an Emmy for his story from Central Africa on the world's only all-black symphony 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.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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