ap

Skip to content

Longtime Denver news anchor, investigative reporter Ward Lucas dies at 75

Ward Lucas, who retired from 9NEWS in 2009, died Sunday at age 75

In this 2001 file photo, former 9News anchor Ward Lucas, left, is seen on the station's set with newscaster Anita Lopez. Lucas, who spent more than three decades at the Denver TV station, died on Sunday. (Photo by John Leyba/The Denver Post)
In this 2001 file photo, former 9News anchor Ward Lucas, left, is seen on the station’s set with newscaster Anita Lopez. Lucas, who spent more than three decades at the Denver TV station, died on Sunday. (Photo by John Leyba/The Denver Post)
Lauren Penington of Denver Post portrait in Denver on Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2024. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

An award-winning, investigative journalist who spent more than 30 years as an anchor and reporter for 9NEWS in Denver died Sunday.

“Very sad news to report tonight,” 9NEWS anchor Tom Green said in Tuesday. “Our friend & longtime colleague Ward Lucas has passed away.”

Lucas, who retired in 2009 after 33 years of reporting and anchoring at 9NEWS in Denver, died Sunday at age 75.

“Ward Lucas overflowed with a key characteristic of great journalists: curiosity,” 9NEWS journalist Kyle Clark . “His deep curiosity led him to become deeply knowledgeable on a wild array of topics. He generously shared that knowledge in long chats with this reporter when we worked weekends together years ago.”

For years at 9NEWS, Lucas — who was part of the original “I-Team” —  partnered with photographer John Fosholt, and they made a multi-award-winning duo.

“We went through some strange and tough moments together as an investigative team,” Fosholt told the Denver Post after Lucas’ retirement, remembering everything from documentaries to traveling to the former Soviet Union. “I think we did some good work along the way.”

Lucas began his broadcasting career at just 16 years old, hosting radio talk shows in Seattle, Washington, . In 1974 he made the move into television at a CBS station in Seattle and then, two years later, moved to 9NEWS in Denver.

Throughout his time as an investigative reporter, Lucas won more than for his work, including 11 Emmy Awards and the George Polk Award in 1983. He was inducted into the  in 2008 and  in 2018.

Lucas’ more than 40 years of investigative journalism included covering the DB Cooper hijacking and the Ted Bundy murders. After retiring from 9NEWS, he wrote three books: “Neighbors at War! The Creepy Case Against Your Homeowner’s Association,” “Sometimes Ya Gotta Ride the Elephant” and “The Wacky World of a Recovering Army Brat Family.”

RevContent Feed

More in Obituaries