Tucker Carlson Announces the Death of His Father, Former KABC Reporter Richard Carlson – Details

Tucker Carlson Announces the Death of His Father, Former KABC Reporter Richard Carlson – Details
Tucker Carlson | Source: Getty Images

Tucker Carlson penned a heartfelt and lengthy obituary for his father, who recently passed away at his home after enduring an illness.

Richard Warner Carlson, a storied journalist, Marine veteran, and former KABC reporter, passed away on March 24, 2025, at the age of 84. In a heartfelt obituary written by his son, Tucker Carlson, the former Fox News personality paid tribute to a life marked by resilience, intellect, and unshakable integrity.

Tucker Carlson during the 2022 Fox Nation Patriot Awards in Hollywood, Florida on November 17, 2022. | Source: Getty Images

Tucker Carlson during the 2022 Fox Nation Patriot Awards in Hollywood, Florida on November 17, 2022. | Source: Getty Images

Alongside a vintage press credential bearing his father’s photo — a young “Dick Carlson” identified as an assignment editor for KTVU-TV — Tucker unveiled the life of a man shaped by hardship and fortified by experience.

“He refused all painkillers to the end and left this world with dignity and clarity,” Tucker wrote. He also revealed that Richard died at home in Boca Grande, Florida, “holding the hands of his children with his dogs at his feet,” after enduring six weeks of illness.

 

The emotional tribute began at the very beginning — Richard’s birth on February 10, 1941, at Massachusetts General Hospital, to a 15-year-old Swedish-speaking girl. He was placed in Boston’s Home for Little Wanderers shortly after, where malnutrition left him with rickets, a condition that bowed his legs for life.

He spent years navigating the foster care system before being adopted by the Carlson family in Norwood, Massachusetts. However, life didn’t get easier — his adoptive father, a tannery manager, died when Richard was just 12.

At 17 years old, he had been jailed for car theft, expelled from school for a second time, and ultimately found structure in the U.S. Marine Corps.

But Richard wasn’t destined to be defined by struggle. “In 1962, in search of adventure, he drove to California,” Tucker recalled. What followed was a whirlwind of life experience — a year aboard the SS Washington Bear as a merchant seaman, transporting cargo to far-flung ports in Asia, and then a leap into journalism.

Vice President JD Vance visiting the Marine Corps Base in Quantico, Virginia on March 26, 2025. | Source: Getty Images

Vice President JD Vance visiting the Marine Corps Base in Quantico, Virginia on March 26, 2025. | Source: Getty Images

From a copyboy at the Los Angeles Times (LA Times), he climbed his way up to become a wire service reporter for UPI and eventually an investigative reporter and anchor for ABC News.

During the turbulent 1960s and ’70s, Richard crossed paths with some of the most notorious and influential figures of the time — Jim Jones, Patty Hearst, Jerry Garcia, Eric Hoffer, and even Mafia leaders and members of the Manson Family.

Patty Hearst's FBI mugshot taken in San Francisco, California on September 18, 1975. | Source: Getty Images

Patty Hearst’s FBI mugshot taken in San Francisco, California on September 18, 1975. | Source: Getty Images

In 1965, while covering the Watts riots in Los Angeles, he was seriously injured — an event that didn’t slow him down but added another scar to a life already layered with grit.

By 1975, he was a single father of two young boys after his wife abruptly left for Europe and never returned. He poured himself into raising them, often bringing them along on reporting trips and turning family dinners into extensive history lessons.

Tucker Carlson at the HeadCount fundraiser in Washington, D.C., on April 7, 2008. | Source: Getty Images

Tucker Carlson at the HeadCount fundraiser in Washington, D.C., on April 7, 2008. | Source: Getty Images

“At home, he educated them during three-hour dinners on topics that ranged from the French Revolution to Bolshevik Russia, PG Wodehouse, the history of the American Indian and, always, the eternal and unchanging nature of people,” Tucker divulged.

Richard’s intellectual curiosity was insatiable. He was known to read compulsively — even at red lights — and left behind a vast personal library of dog-eared books covered in handwritten notes. His life experience, combined with his voracious reading, ultimately cemented a firm belief — “God is real.”

 

In 1979, Richard found lasting love when he married Patricia Swanson. The two shared a happy 44 years together until her passing. “She died sixteen months before he did and he mourned her every day,” Tucker shared.

Long before he was devastated by his beloved wife’s passing, Richard’s career continued to ascend. In 1985, he joined the Reagan administration as the director of the Voice of America, later serving as the U.S. ambassador to the Seychelles.

Former US President Ronald Reagan addressing the nation in 1987. | Source: Getty Images

Former US President Ronald Reagan addressing the nation in 1987. | Source: Getty Images

By 1992, he was CEO of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) and would go on to lead a division of King World television. During his tenure as president of the CPB, Richard brought the same directness and initiative that had defined his earlier work in journalism and diplomacy.

He served at a pivotal time in the early 1990s — a period marked by efforts to reshape and modernize the nation’s public broadcasting framework following the passage of the 1992 Public Telecommunications Act.

On December 9 of that year, Richard took a proactive step by circulating a letter to a wide spectrum of stakeholders — including board members of major public broadcasting entities, leaders of regional and national organizations, station managers, and other key figures in public media.

His goal was simple yet strategic — to solicit meaningful feedback and ensure that the implementation process reflected the voices of those most directly involved.

His illustrious television career saw him garner numerous prestigious awards, such as a Peabody, Headliners and Golden Mike honors, and three Emmys. However, the last 25 years of his life took a more mysterious turn.

Tucker admitted that the details of his father’s work during this time were “never completely clear to his family,” though it was apparent he was involved in high-level work across dozens of countries and breakaway republics.

He crossed paths with global figures such as Lebanon’s Rafic Hariri, Adjara’s Aslan Abashidze, Zaire’s Mobutu Sese Seko, and unnamed leaders of Somaliland. “He was a fundamentally nonjudgmental person who was impossible to shock, and he described them all with amused affection,” explained Tucker.

Tucker Carlson speaking during the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on July 18, 2024. | Source: Getty Images

Tucker Carlson speaking during the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on July 18, 2024. | Source: Getty Images

Beyond his widely recognized titles in journalism and diplomacy, Richard’s career was punctuated by bold moves and controversial chapters that further cemented his reputation as both fearless and unconventional.

One of the more explosive episodes came while working at the LA Times, where he formed a friendship and professional bond with Carl Brisson — the son of Hollywood actress Rosalind Russell. The duo’s journalistic collaboration would go on to make national headlines.

Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *