Obituaries
Life Of Capital Editor Rob Hiaasen To Be Celebrated
A celebration of life will be held on Monday, July 2, to remember Rob Hiaasen, an editor and columnist for The Capital.

OWINGS MILLS, MD — Days after the fatal newsroom shootings in Annapolis, loved ones will celebrate the life of one of The Capital staffers who was killed. A celebration of life for Rob Hiaasen will be held Monday night at the Irvine Nature Center in Owings Mills.
Hiaasen was the assistant editor and Sunday columnist at The Capital, where he was working when a gunman with a longstanding grudge against the paper killed five employees on Thursday, June 28.
Hiaasen was 59.
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A native of south Florida, Hiaasen worked at the Palm Beach Post and The Baltimore Sun before reportedly accepting a buyout in 2008 and joining The Capital as assistant editor in 2010.
"His writing was lyrical and beautiful but also smart and funny," Miami Herald editor Amy Driscoll told the ABC affiliate in Miami. She worked with Hiaasen at the Palm Beach Post, where he began as a government reporter and switched over to features writing.
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At The Capital, he did an "amazing pivot" in his career, becoming all the things writers want in a good editor, a former colleague told The Baltimore Sun, describing Hiaasen as a "master of asking questions" and having an "innate curiosity."
Hiaasen was celebrated for his witty writing and connections with humanity. He won an award from the Maryland DC Press Association for a column he wrote in 2017 about segregation on south Florida beaches, according to The Baltimore Sun, which reported he was also a Knight Fellow at Stanford University and earned national recognition for a Palm Beach Post piece he wrote in 1991 about a dentist who gave his patients AIDS.
In addition, he taught at the University of Maryland Phillip Merrill College of Journalism.
"He brought a light into my life which showed me that I could do journalism in my own way...He believed in me so much. He believed in everyone so much," one of his students wrote on the college's Facebook page after she learned of his death. "He really loved teaching and reporting, and he really loved journalism."
Hiaasen is survived by three children Ben, Samantha and Hannah, who are 29, 27 and 26, respectively; and his wife of 33 years, Maria, according to The Baltimore Sun, which reported he leaves behind older siblings Barb, Judy and Carl.
Miami Herald columnist and novelist Carl Hiaasen, who was six years Rob's senior, told CNN his younger brother's nickname "Big Rob" came not just from his towering stature (he was reportedly 6-feet-5-inches tall) but because of the "remarkable heart and humor that made him larger than all of us."
Rob Hiaasen was featured on the front page of The Capital on Monday, with the headline: "Hiaasen was a writer with a light touch."
The celebration of life for Rob Hiaasen will be from 6 to 9 p.m. on Monday, July 2, at Irvine Nature Center, 11201 Garrison Forest Road, Owings Mills. It is private and people are encouraged to dress casually, The Capital reported, saying the invitation read: "Rob would never want you to put on a suit for him..."
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Main picture with article is a still of Rob Hiaasen from WPTV/YouTube.
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