Houston Chronicle

NPR editor resigns amid accusation­s

- By Sydney Ember

Michael Oreskes, who led NPR’s news division and was formerly a highrankin­g editor at the New York Times, resigned Wednesday after being accused of sexually harassing women.

Jarl Mohn, NPR’s president and chief executive, said in a memo to employees that he had asked Oreskes to resign “because of inappropri­ate behavior.”

The move came after the Washington Post reported the accounts of two women who said Oreskes had sexually harassed them in the 1990s when he was the Washington bureau chief at the Times. The women said Oreskes made unwanted sexual advances as they were discussing career opportunit­ies and advice with him.

After the Post published its report, a current NPR employee, Rebecca Hersher, said she had filed a complaint about Oreskes with NPR’s human resources department in October 2015. Oreskes joined NPR in March 2015.

Mohn said in his memoto employees that NPR had been acting on accusation­s against Oreskes before the news reports were published.

“Some have asked me if it took published news reports for us to take action,” Mohn said. “The answer is that it did not. We have been acting. Some of the steps we took were visible and others weren’t. We have a process in place and we followed that process.”

In a statement, Oreskes said: “I am deeply sorry to the people I hurt. My behavior was wrong and inexcusabl­e, and I accept full responsibi­lity.”

Oreskes’ career in journalism stretches back some 40 years. He has won three Emmy Awards as a producer of documentar­ies.

Oreskes is the latest powerful media figure to face accusation­s of sexual harassment. Since reports began to surface several weeks ago involving allegation­s of sexual harassment and assault by the entertainm­ent tycoon Harvey Weinstein, the floodgates seem to have opened.

In recent days, the prominent political journalist Mark Halperin; the longtime New Republic literary editor Leon Wieseltier; Hamilton Fish, the president and publisher of the New Republic; and Roy Price, a top executive at Amazon, have faced harassment accusation­s that led to sudden downfalls.

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