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Posted: 2024-04-21T21:27:36Z | Updated: 2024-04-21T21:27:36Z

LOS ANGELES (AP) Terry Anderson, the globe-trotting Associated Press correspondent who became one of Americas longest-held hostages after he was snatched from a street in war-torn Lebanon in 1985 and held for nearly seven years, has died at 76.

Anderson, who chronicled his abduction and torturous imprisonment by Islamic militants in his best-selling 1993 memoir Den of Lions, he died in Greenwood Lake, New York, said his daughter, Sulome Anderson.

After returning to the United States in 1991, Anderson led a peripatetic life, giving public speeches, teaching journalism at several prominent universities and, at various times, operating a blues bar, Cajun restaurant, horse ranch and gourmet restaurant.

He also struggled with post-traumatic stress disorder, won millions of dollars in frozen Iranian assets after a federal court concluded that country played a role in his capture, then lost most of it to bad investments. He filed for bankruptcy in 2009.