BOSTON - A former U.S. Embassy worker in Iran who survived 444 days of captivity after he was taken hostage in 1979, died in a two-car accident allegedly caused by a drunk driver. <br>
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Malcolm Kalp, 63, was pronounced dead at the scene Sunday after his pickup truck apparently was rear-ended by another driver, state police Trooper David Paine said. Kalp apparently lost control and the truck rolled over, Paine said. <br>
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Richard Clinch, 22, was arrested and charged with operating under the influence and motor vehicle homicide due to negligence. He was scheduled to be arraigned Monday in Stoughton District Court. <br>
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"Aside from all the things he did for his country, my husband was a very good, wonderful man. Life is often unfair," his wife, Marie Kalp, told the Boston Herald. <br>
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Kalp was the embassy's commercial officer when he and 51 others were taken hostage Nov. 4, 1979. <br>
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Kalp said he tried to escape three times, and was beaten and held in solitary confinement for 374 days as a result. His captors accused him of being a CIA spy. <br>
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Kalp, a Boston native, remained bitter and unforgiving almost two decades after his release. <br>
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In March of 2000, shortly after former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright announced the United States was extending an olive branch to Iran by opening some trade, Kalp rejected the overture. <br>
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"I wouldn't have anything to do with them," he told The Associated Press. <br>
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Kalp thought Iran should first demonstrate "major corrections in their international behavior," including ceasing to send arms "through Syria to attack Israel." <br>
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A year later, in a story about how Iran had turned the former embassy into a museum, Kalp's feelings had not softened. He said the museum was propaganda. <br>
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"I wouldn't expect any balance. What else is new? They're still talking about American imperialism. They'll never change," he told the Los Angeles Times. <br>
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http://accesswdun.com/article/2002/4/202542
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