Houston Chronicle

Newspaper exec is accused of spanking female workers

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ANNISTON, Ala. — The chairman of a company that publishes six newspapers in Alabama has been accused of assaulting female employees by spanking them while he was a newsroom executive decades ago.

In reports published in Alabama news outlets, at least three women say H. Brandt Ayers, who became a nationally known voice of Southern liberalism during his tenure as editor and publisher at the Anniston Star, assaulted them in the mid-1970s, once using a metal ruler. The women and other former newsroom employees say Ayers had a reputation for spanking other women.

Ayers — now 82 and chairman of Consolidat­ed Published Co., which operates six papers including the Star — issued a statement saying he “did some things I regret” when he was a “very young man with more authority than judgment.”

An online publicatio­n, Alabama Political Reporter, first reported the allegation­s of former Star employee Veronica Pike Kennedy. The Star later published its own account quoting Kennedy and two other women who declined to have their names published; the Montgomery Advertiser also interviewe­d Kennedy and cited one woman who asked to remain anonymous.

Kennedy told the Advertiser she was working as a part-time clerk in a nearly deserted newsroom on a Saturday morning more than 40 years ago when she joked with Ayers about one of his columns after he asked her to read it.

“And he said, ‘Oh, you are being a bad girl,’” Kennedy said. “’You know what I do to bad girls? I spank them.”

Ayers forcibly pulled her out of a chair and whipped her with a metal ruler, Kennedy said. Kennedy said the episode led her to seek counseling years later.

“It was hard to trust anybody in authority for a long time after that,” she said. “I had anger I didn’t realize I had.”

Mike Stamler told the Advertiser he was in the newsroom that day, working on a story. He said he remembered seeing Ayers and Kennedy disagreed about something, then saw the assault. “I was stunned,” he said. Trisha O’Connor, a journalism professor who worked at the Star as a reporter and editor during the period, told the Associated Press in an interview Tuesday that although she didn’t witness or experience assaults, stories of Ayers’ behavior were so numerous that she and other women at the paper would tell new female workers to avoid Ayers and stay away from his office unless accompanie­d by a supervisor.

Ayers did not return an email seeking comment. He addressed the accusation­s in a statement published by The Star on Monday:

“As a very young man with more authority than judgment, I did some things I regret,” Ayers said. “At my advanced age I wish I could relive those days again, knowing the seriousnes­s of my position and with the accumulate­d judgment that goes with age.”

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