ROCHESTER, N.H. — James Foley, who was captured and held six weeks while covering the uprising in Libya, knew the risks when he went to Syria in 2012 to cover the escalating violence there. It didn’t matter. He was a journalist at heart, once saying he’d cover local news if it meant doing the job he loved.

Foley was snatched again in Syria in November 2012, when the car he was riding in was stopped by four militants in a battle zone that Sunni rebel fighters and government forces were trying to control. A video posted Tuesday purportedly showed his execution, but officials in Washington were still working to verify its authenticity.

At Foley’s family home in Rochester, a light burned yellow in a center upstairs window and a yellow ribbon adorned a tree at the foot of the driveway. His mother, Diane Foley, her eyes red and glassy, said her family would be making no statements on the video.

The Rev. Paul Gousse, of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary, where the Foleys are parishioners, spent about 45 minutes at the house. He left without commenting.

Since Foley’s disappearance, his family has maintained the website Find James Foley, where people were posting messages of condolence Tuesday.

Foley, 40, worked in conflict zones in the Middle East, including Syria, Libya and Iraq. He and another journalist were working in Syria’s northern province of Idlib when they were kidnapped near the village of Taftanaz.

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After Foley disappeared, while contributing video for Agence France-Press and the media company GlobalPost, his parents became fierce advocates for him and all those kidnapped in war zones. They held regular prayer vigils and worked with the U.S. and Syrian diplomatic corps to get whatever scraps of information they could.

Diane Foley, asked in January 2013 if her son had reservations about going to Syria, said softly: “Not enough.”

He had seen the dangers to journalists up close.

Upon his release from Libya and return to the United States, he recalled in an interview with The Associated Press seeing a colleague, South African photographer Anton Hammerl, killed by forces loyal to Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi. He tried to pull his friend’s body out of harm’s way but was turned back by heavy fire.

“I’ll regret that day for the rest of my life. I’ll regret what happened to Anton,” Foley said. “I will constantly analyze that.”

Foley also covered the war in Afghanistan but called the Libyan fighting the worst he had ever experienced to that point.

Foley grew up in New Hampshire and studied history at Marquette University. He later taught in Arizona, Massachusetts and Chicago before switching careers to become a journalist, which he viewed as a calling.

“Journalism is journalism,” Foley said. “If I had a choice to do Nashua (New Hampshire) zoning meetings or give up journalism, I’ll do it. I love writing and reporting.”


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