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Michael Hastings’ death remains under investigation

Michael Hastings, shown last year, rejected the cozy access reporting favored by some of his colleagues in favor of bare-knuckle truth-telling that sometimes rubbed his peers and subjects the wrong way.
(D Dipasupil / Getty Images)
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Authorities are continuing to sort out the details of an auto accident that apparently claimed the life of award-winning journalist Michael Hastings.

The death of the 33-year-old Hastings was announced by his employer, BuzzFeed, which said he died in a Los Angeles car accident.

But the Los Angeles county coroner’s office had yet to determine Tuesday night whether a body recovered from a fiery car crash was that of Hastings.

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The body was badly charred and identified only as “John Doe 117,” law enforcement authorities told the Los Angeles Times.

Coroner’s officials were attempting to match dental records to help make a positive identification, according to authorities.

The crash occurred early Tuesday on Highland Avenue near Melrose Avenue.

The website BuzzFeed first reported Hastings’ death. Hastings had opened BuzzFeed’s L.A. bureau last fall. An obituary by Rolling Stone followed. He also wrote for that publication.

In reporting stints in Baghdad, Washington and Kabul, Hastings rejected the cozy access reporting favored by some of his colleagues in favor of bare-knuckle truth-telling that sometimes rubbed his peers and subjects the wrong way.

His 2010 Rolling Stone profile of Gen. Stanley McChrystal, “The Runaway General,” exposed the general and his staff’s disdain for their superiors, including National Security Advisor James L. Jones, Vice President Joe Biden and President Obama.

While other reporters had been charmed by McChrystal’s locker-room-style banter, Hastings believed the chatter had a darker edge. The reporter had the good fortune of being hunkered down for more than a week with the commander and his staff in Europe as they waited out air traffic delays caused by a volcano eruption in Iceland.

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During the delay, Hastings recorded the officers deriding Biden as “Bite Me,” belittling America’s French allies as “gay,” and calling Jones, a retired four-star general, a “clown.”

McChrystal had previously antagonized the Obama administration by using the media to promote a troop build-up in Afghanistan. The Rolling Stone article proved one breach too many for Obama. The president recalled the general to Washington, where McChrystal offered his resignation.

Hastings won the prestigious George Polk Award for magazine reporting and later wrote a book about McChrystal and his time in the war zone: “The Operators: The Wild and Terrifying Inside Story of America’s War in Afghanistan.”

Hastings was born Jan. 28, 1980, in Burlington, Vt., and graduated from New York University in 2002. Newsweek had assigned him to cover the war in Iraq at 25. His reporting there was equally brash but most memorable because of his writing about a personal tragedy. His girlfriend, Andi Parhamovich, died in an ambush by Sunni extremists.

Back in his home state of Vermont and recuperating from the loss, Hastings needed just weeks to turn his Iraq experiences and Parhamovich’s death into a draft of the book, “I Lost My Love in Baghdad.”

If a few journalists thought his assessment of McChrystal overly harsh, others were unnerved by his willingness to so rapidly convert personal tragedy into reportage. “Because telling it takes the author to no depth of felt insight, this portrait of Andi is either unnecessary or unjust, or perhaps both,” wrote George Packer in the New Yorker.

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Hastings’ stories, though, were not easily forgotten. Rolling Stone noted Tuesday the breadth of his coverage, despite his youth: an expose of American drone attacks, an exclusive interview with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and a look at the Army‘s use of “psychological operations” to influence sitting senators. He also reported on the presidential campaigns of 2008 and 2012.

In a 2010 interview with the Los Angeles Times, Hastings said he admired “writers who live their lives with integrity and without compromise.” He even identified McChrystal as a kindred spirit, someone who also liked to stick it to “The Man.”

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andrew.blankstein@latimes.com

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