US editor Michael Oreskes resigns after harassment claims
AFPA senior editor accused of kissing female colleagues without their consent during business meetings has resigned.
Michael Oreskes, 63, was asked to step down by the National Public Radio (NPR) network in response to the allegations.
The incidents allegedly occurred in the late 1990s, when Mr Oreskes worked at the New York Times.
He has not commented publicly on the allegations, and journalists at NPR report that they have tried to contact him for comment, without success.
He said the resignation was “effective immediately”.
One of the women said that while she met Mr Oreskes in the hope of getting a job with the New York Times, he suggested that they eat room service lunch in a hotel, before he unexpectedly kissed her and “slipped his tongue into her mouth”.
She told the paper: “The worst part of my whole encounter with Oreskes wasn’t the weird offers of room service lunch or the tongue kiss but the fact that he utterly destroyed my ambition.”
AFPThe second woman said she met Mr Oreskes after he offered to help review her work.
She drove him to the airport as he had a flight to catch after their meeting, but he unexpectedly kissed her while saying goodbye.
“I was frozen. I was shocked. I thought, ‘What just happened?'” she recalled.
Later, she said, when she confronted him directly about the incident, he told her he was “overcome with passion”.
The Washington Post said it had made “multiple requests for comment” to Mr Oreskes, but none had been answered.
She said he divulged many personal details and veered into topics including relationships and sex. He did not touch her inappropriately, she said, and she was satisfied by the response when she reported the incident to NPR.
Mr Oreskes, who had senior editorial roles at the New York Times and Associated Press, was hired as senior vice president for news at NPR in 2015.
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