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Lara Logan (born 29 March 1971) [1] is a South African television and radio journalist and war correspondent. Logan's career began in South Africa with various news organizations in the 1990s. Her profile rose due to reporting around the American invasion of Afghanistan in 2001.
Logan started speaking more openly about her personal politics around the same time that an inaccurate story brought down her career at CBS. What happened to Lara Logan?
CBS News correspondent Lara Logan is back in the hospital for injuries sustained from being attacked in 2011. The 43-year-old was sexually assaulted and beaten while reporting from Egypt's Tahrir ...
On 15 February, CBS News reported [98] that its chief foreign correspondent, Lara Logan, had been assaulted on 11 February, by a frenzied mob of Egyptian protesters. She was abruptly separated from her crew, after which she suffered a brutal 20-30-minute beating and sexual assault, before being rescued by a group of Egyptian women and an ...
“Lara Logan Has No Agenda” host Lara Logan opens up about her horrible experience when reporting in Egypt and the border.
In the wake of Lara Logan's account of sexual assault, Barker wrote about harassment issues she faced being a female correspondent. [5] She is currently a reporter for The New York Times. [6] In 2023 she produced a podcast called The Coldest Case in Laramie about a cold case from her hometown of Laramie, Wyoming. [7]
CBS News foreign correspondent Lara Logan was rushed to a DC hospital Wednesday with internal bleeding. Page Six was the first to report the incident, saying Logan was diagnosed with ...
Among other notable personas to address Logan's assault in Egypt, Pulitzer Prize winner Leonard Pitts Jr. has now chimed in on the incident (I am with you). His identity is not that important here, but his message is certainly applicable to this situation: Lara Logan was sexually assaulted. She is a real person.