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2 former NBC employees say anchor Tom Brokaw made unwanted advances (update)

Tom Brokaw has denied all allegations.

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Samantha Grasso

NBC News Anchor Tom Brokaw.
Chad J. McNeeley/U.S. Navy (Public Domain)

Former NBC News correspondent Linda Vester and an anonymous former production assistant have told the Washington Post that anchor Tom Brokaw made unwanted sexual advances and acted inappropriately with them in the 1990s. Neither women reported the incidents at the time.

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According to the Post report, Vester, 30 years Brokaw’s junior, said the anchor invited himself to her hotel room in 1994 despite her attempts to convince him not to. Once inside the room, Vester said Brokaw beckoned her to the sofa and touched her without her consent. He “pressed his index finger to my lips and said, ‘This is our compact,’” according to Vester’s diary entry from the time.

He then allegedly put his hand behind her neck, gripped her head, and stated, “Now let me show you how to give a real kiss,” before jerking her head toward his. She said she tensed up, got free of his grip, and told him, “‘Tom…I don’t want to do that with you.’” The Post corroborated Vester’s statements with her diary from the time, as well as with a fellow former NBC coworker of Vester’s who she confided in that night.

The second account of sexual misconduct against Brokaw comes from an anonymous former production assistant, who was 24 at the time. She said that once in a hallway in the mid-1990s, Brokaw approached her in a small enclave, commented that her hands were cold, then put her hands under his jacket against him and pulled her in close. He asked her how her job search was going, she said, and then asked her to come to his office for coffee later to talk about it.

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She told the Post that “the implication of his invitation” was clear. She never went to his office and left her job shortly after the encounter.

In November, NBC fired Today show host Matt Lauer for “inappropriate sexual behavior in the workplace.” The network took a number of missteps in handling the Lauer accusations, according to the Post. Former Today co-host Ann Curry said in 2012, the year she was let go, she warned management about an employee who told her that Lauer sexually harassed her; NBC said it has no such record.

Vester told the Post she does not intend to sue Brokaw or NBC. Brokaw has denied the behavior described by Vester and said the incident described by the anonymous former production assistant never happened.

“I met with Linda Vester on two occasions, both at her request, 23 years ago, because she wanted advice with respect to her career at NBC,” Brokaw responded in a statement from NBC. “The meetings were brief, cordial and appropriate, and despite Linda’s allegations, I made no romantic overtures towards her, at that time or any other.”

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Update 7:26am CT, April 28: Dozens of female journalists—including MSNBC star Rachel Maddow, Andrea Mitchell, and Maria Shriver—have signed a letter of support for Brokaw, saying he “has treated each of us with fairness and respect” and calling him “a man of tremendous decency and integrity.”

Here, via the Hollywood Reporter, is the entire text of the letter, which was signed by 64 women and released Friday.

Subject: Letter on Tom Brokaw

As professional women, we fully endorse the conversation around abuse of power in the workplace. In the context of that conversation, we would like to share our perspectives on working with Tom Brokaw.

 

We are current and former colleagues of Tom’s, who have worked with him over a period spanning four decades. We are producers, correspondents, anchors, directors, executives, researchers, personal assistants, editors, and technical staff.

 

Tom has treated each of us with fairness and respect. He has given each of us opportunities for advancement and championed our successes throughout our careers. As we have advanced across industries—news, publishing, law, business and government—Tom has been a valued source of counsel and support. We know him to be a man of tremendous decency and integrity.

 

Signed,

 

Susanna Aaron

Anne Binford Allen

Heather Allan

Marilyn Altman

Liz Bowyer

Mary Casalino

Christine Colvin Casper

Martha Cotton

Karen Curry

Sara Cusimano

Helene Darvick

Linda Ellman

Judy Farinet

Dianne Festa

Tammy Fine

Mary Laurence Flynn

Susan Friedman

Soraya Gage

Maralyn Gelefsky

Cheryl Gould

Erika Beck Grothues

Colleen Halpin

Jody Henenfeld

Susan Morris Holey

Julie Holstein

Julie Huang

Peggy Hubble

Kiko Itasaka

Nancy Jacoby

Kat Keeney

Ann Kolbell

Audrey Beles Kolina

Susan LaSalla

Rachel Maddow

Donna Mastrangelo-Ryan

Andrea Mitchell

Mauri Moore

Frieda Morris

Elena Nachmanoff

Michele Neubert

Kelly O’Donnell

Bonnie Optekman

Mary Alice O’Rourke

Nancy Doyle Palmer

Polly Powell

Meaghan Rady

Elizabeth Vaughan Romaine

Amy Rosenberg

Stephanie Ruhle

Bita Ryan

Ruby Shamir

Maria Shriver

Robin Skolnick

Andrea Smith

Patricia Sullivan

Clare Duffy Swift

Yuka Tachibana

Bambi Tascarella

Zoya Taylor

Dee Dee Thomas

Anne Thompson

Kelly Venardos

Kristen Welker

Carolyn Wheatley

Mary Wolf

MSNBC’s Mika Brzezinski approved of their message.

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H/T the Cut

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