Engberg wrote disparagingly of the candidates' performance in the 2000presidential debates.[15] He cautioned that anonymous sources are often misleading.[3]
^ abGoldberg, Bernard (January 2, 2002). "Networks Need a Reality Check: A firsthand account of liberal bias at CBS News". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2012-02-10. Which brings us to a recent "Reality Check" on the "CBS Evening News," reported by Eric Engberg, a longtime friend. His subject was Steve Forbes's flat tax. It's not just Democrats and some Republican presidential candidates who don't like the flat tax--it's also a lot of big-time reporters. The flat tax rubs them the wrong way. Which is fair enough--until their bias makes its way into their reporting. And Mr. Engberg's report set new standards for bias.
^"(blurb re CBS evening news)". Archived from the original on 2012-12-14. Retrieved 2012-02-10. "Reality Check," Correspondent Eric Engberg 's reports that get beyond the conventional wisdom to what is really happening behind the hype and the headlines.
^ ab"Communications". Poop Deck, The Monthly Newsletter. Bradenton, Florida: Bradenton Yacht Club. February 2012. Retrieved 2012-02-10. Both Judy and Eric Engberg are retiring from the Poopdeck as editor and photo department. They hope to spend more time on their Grand Banks 36' Copycat and with their grandchildren. Judy has been putting the Poopdeck together -- writing, editing, cropping, and the dozens of things that make it work -- under the watch of eight Commodores. Judy and Eric met at and graduated from the famed University of Missouri School of Journalism (1962) and married shortly thereafter. Judy became a working reporter and editor while Eric went toward TV and eventually became a national news and political correspondent for CBS Evening News. Judy focused on raising their three sons while Eric went to the hotspots of the world. Upon retirement, they moved from Bethesda, MD to Bradenton and became members of BYC in 2002
^"Television investigative reporting - Tomb of the Unknown Soldier". Sigma Delta Chi 1998 Awards, Profiles in Excellence(PDF). Society of Professional Journalists. June 1999. pp. 36–37. Archived from the original(PDF) on 2009-10-15. Retrieved 2012-02-10. Eric Engberg, Vince Gonzales, Dick Meyer at CBS News
^ ab"Tomb of the Unknowns". Archived from the original on 2017-06-23. Retrieved 2012-02-10. This series of stories dealt with the identify of the American serviceman buried as the Vietnam Unknown in 1984. CBS News found (and reported) that he had an identity and that it was known to many in the military before the remains were buried at Arlington National Cemetery. Using the Freedom of Information Act and record searches ... (CBS News) found that the Unknown was most certainly Air Force Lt. Michael Joseph Blassie and that certain military officials kept that fact secret. ... The Pentagon took the unprecedented step of ordering the Tomb opened and the remains subjected to DNA testing. The tests proved it was Blassie and he was ultimately buried under a stone bearing his own name in Veterans cemetery outside St. Louis.