Toronto Star

NBC News’ Brokaw slams sexual-misconduct allegation­s

Veteran journalist pens long letter disputing accusation­s made by former colleague Tom Brokaw said he was “stunned” by Linda Vester’s recent allegation­s.

- STEPHEN BATTAGLIO

Longtime NBC News journalist Tom Brokaw is pushing back hard at allegation­s by Linda Vester, a former network correspond­ent who said he sexually harassed her in the mid-1990s.

Brokaw sent a lengthy letter to colleagues Friday that disputes the accounts of Vester, 54, who told Variety and the Washington Post in stories published Thursday that the former NBC

Nightly News anchor made unwanted sexual advances toward her when they worked together at NBC in the 1990s.

In his letter, obtained by the Los Angeles Times, Brokaw described the stories as a “drive by shooting” by Vester, who had a grudge against NBC News because her career stalled at the division.

Vester alleged that Brokaw forcefully tried to kiss her in 1994 when she was staying at the Essex House Hotel in New York, where he showed up uninvited. A similar incident occurred in May 1995, she alleged, when Brokaw appeared unannounce­d at her flat in London when she was assigned to the network’s bureau there.

Vester alleged that in both instances, Brokaw pressured her to have a sexual relationsh­ip with him. She said she feared that reporting the incidents would hurt her career.

Brokaw issued a brief statement Thursday saying the incidents Vester described in her accounts did not happen, and on Friday, he issued a lengthy letter to colleagues that slammed her account —and her career at NBC.

“Linda Vester was given the run of the Washington Post and Variety to vent her grievances, to complain that I tickled her without permission (you read that right) that I invaded her hotel room, accepted an invitation to her apartment under false pretenses and in general was given a free hand to try to destroy all that I have achieved with my family, my NBC career, my writing and my citizenshi­p,” Brokaw wrote. “My family and friends are stunned and supportive. My NBC colleagues are bewildered that Vester, who had limited success at NBC News, a modest career at Fox and a reputation as a colleague who had trouble with the truth was suddenly the keeper of the flame of journalist­ic integrity.”

Brokaw maintains that Vester initiated the New York hotel room meeting she described in the interviews. “I should not have gone but I emphatical­ly did not verbally and physically attack her and suggest an affair in language right out of pulp fiction,” Brokaw said. “She was coy, not frightened, filled with office gossip, including a recent rumour of an affair. As that discussion advanced she often reminded me she was a Catholic and that she was uncomforta­ble with my presence. So I left, 23 years later to be stunned by her melodramat­ic descriptio­n of the meeting.”

Brokaw expresses anguish in the letter that Vester did not contact him to discuss the events of 23 years ago before going to the press.

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