Hartford Courant

Tribune Publishing names new CEO as 3 execs depart

- By Robert Channick Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO — Tribune Publishing CEO Justin Dearborn has stepped down after nearly three years at the helm, the Chicago-based newspaper company announced Thursday.

Longtime Chicago newspaper executive Tim Knight was named CEO, effective immediatel­y. Knight, who had served as president of the company, will also join the Tribune Publishing board.

Board member David Dreier, a former congressma­n, has been named chairman of Tribune Publishing, replacing Dearborn.

The company also announced the departures Thursday of Ross Levinsohn and Mickie Rosen, who served as CEO and president, respective­ly, of Tribune Interactiv­e, the digital arm of Tribune Publishing.

The moves come as Trib- une Publishing is engaged in a formal sale process. In December, the company terminated negotiatio­ns to sell the newspaper chain to the California-based McClatchy Co. New Yorkbased investment firm Donerail and Dallas-based newspaper group Aim Media are working on a joint bid to buy Tribune Publishing, according to multiple sources familiar with negotiatio­ns. Tribune Publishing is the parent company of the Chicago Tribune.

Tribune Publishing also owns the Baltimore Sun; Hartford Courant; Orlando Sentinel; the New York Daily News; the Capital Gazette in Annapolis, Md.; The Morning Call in Allentown, Pa.; the Daily Press in Newport News, Va.; and The Virginian-Pilot in Norfolk, Va. The company reverted to its legacy name in October.

Dearborn, 49, joined Tribune Publishing as CEO in February 2016, three weeks after his longtime business associate, Michael Ferro, became the company’s largest shareholde­r and non-executive chairman. Ferro stepped down from the board last year. Dearborn had been CEO of Merge Healthcare, a Ferrocontr­olled medical technology company that was acquired by IBM in 2015.

Knight, 53, previously served as CEO of Wrapports, the former ownership group of the Chicago Sun-Times.

Levinsohn, 55, joined Tribune Publishing in 2017 as publisher and CEO of the Los Angeles Times, which was then owned by the Chicago-based company. He was placed on unpaid leave in January 2018 in the wake of published reports that he was a defendant in two sexual harassment lawsuits while an executive at other media companies.

Following an independen­t investigat­ion, Levinsohn was reinstated by the company in February and shifted to a new role.

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