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Radio talk show host killed by train while jogging on railroad tracks

HALTOM CITY,  Texas — Longtime conservative radio talk show host Michael "Doc" Thompson was killed by a train while jogging last week.

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Thompson’s wife, Arkansas TV anchor Yuna Lee, said Thompson, 49, was killed by a Amtrak train while jogging in Haltom City, Texas, in metro Dallas on Tuesday, according to his employer, Mojo 5.0.

The Dallas Morning News reported witnesses and the train's crew saw Thompson jogging along the track before the passing train hit him at about 3:45 p.m.

Police told the newspaper it was not clear if Thompson had been wearing a pair of earbuds, which were found at the scene.

At the time of his death, Thompson was the host of "Doc Thompson's Daily MoJo 5.0.” He launched the show after leaving The Blaze Radio Network.

"MoJo 5.0 mourns the loss of a great friend and mentor, Michael "Doc" Thompson. Rest in peace, brother," the radio station said in a Tweet. 

>> Related: Yuna Lee on death of husband Doc Thompson: ‘We will take all the love and prayers we can get’

GoFundMe page has been set up to support his family.

Thompson and Lee married in 2012 and have two children together. He had a child from a prior relationship.

MoJo 5.0 Radio shared details about the GoFundme.com campaign for Lee and her children on Facebook and Twitter.

The fundraiser’s description reads:

“It comes with a heavy heart, that we announce the passing of our good friend Michael "Doc" Thompson. Doc loved his job as a radio talk show host, and he was a great husband and father. This page is to raise funds for expenses and the needs of the family. Doc leaves behind his wife, Yuna, and his three children Tiger, Cubby, and Wythe. The Mojo5.0 family mourns this loss and appreciates your generosity. We ask that you please respect the families privacy at sensitive time.”

He just always had a positive attitude and a can-do spirit," Blaze Media host Glenn Beck said in an article posted on the company's website. "And we are devastated as a family and devastated for his family."

Raised in Ashtabula, Thompson was a longtime conservative radio show personality. He formerly worked at WRVA in Richmond, Va., and WLW in Cincinnati.