Santa Fe New Mexican

NPR news chief fired after harassment allegation­s

- By David Bauder

NEW YORK — Michael Oreskes was ousted Wednesday as National Public Radio’s news chief following sexual harassment accusation­s, some dating to when he was Washington bureau chief at The New York Times in the 1990s.

Oreskes had been placed on leave by NPR following a report Tuesday in The Washington Post about two women who said that he suddenly kissed them when they were discussing job prospects at The Times. Subsequent to that story, NPR received another complaint about Oreskes’ behavior at the radio network from a current employee, said Jarl Mohn, the company’s president and CEO.

Mohn asked for and received Oreskes’ resignatio­n Wednesday morning. Chris Turpin, NPR’s vice president of news programmin­g and operations, was appointed temporary leader of the radio network’s newsroom.

Oreskes said in a statement that he was deeply sorry to the people he hurt.

“My behavior was wrong and inexcusabl­e, and I accept full responsibi­lity,” he said.

One of the women who complained about Oreskes’ behavior at The Times reported it to NPR last year, and the second did last month, Mohn said in an interview on NPR’s All Things Considered. The two women spoke to The Post on condition of anonymity. Following the newspaper’s report, NPR said that Oreskes had been reprimande­d after a separate incident in 2015 in which a female producer complained she was made to feel uncomforta­ble during a dinner when Oreskes talked about sex and asked about her personal life.

Mohn would not discuss details of the new case. But he said on a scale that ranges from the harassment and assault complaints against Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein to the 2015 NPR incident, he said it was more along the lines of an uncomforta­ble conversati­on.

Mohn said he’d been asked why it took published news reports for NPR to take action. “The answer is that it did not,” he said. “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.”

 ??  ?? Michael Oreskes
Michael Oreskes

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States