Jarriel began his career at KPRC-TV in Houston.[1] Shortly after joining ABC News in the 1960s, 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 newsmagazine20/20, 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.[2]
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.[1]
Jarriel retired from broadcasting in 2002, but briefly returned the following year to contribute to ABC's coverage of the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster.[1]
Awards and honors
Jarriel received 10 Emmy Awards over the course of his career.[3]
Personal life and death
Jarriel married Joan Borgeson in 1957, and they had three children.[1] In their later years, they divided their time between Florida and Edgewater, Maryland.[1]
Jarriel had a stroke in December 2023, and died from related complications at a care facility in Annapolis, Maryland, on October 24, 2024, at the age of 89.[1][4]