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Former public radio host accused of sexual misconduct

File- In this April 5, 2000 file photo, journalist John Hockenberry joins photographer Annie Leibovitz after Leibovitz received the Alfred Eisenstaedt Award for Magazine Photography in the Portrait category in New York. Hockenberry, who most recently hosted a show on New York public radio, is the latest influential man to be accused of sexual misconduct. A guest on his radio show in 2014 stated in a recent story on New York Magazine's website that he sent her a series of emails that made her uncomfortable. (AP Photo/Stuart Ramson, File)

NEW YORK - A former public radio host in New York City who left his show earlier this year has been accused of sexual misconduct by an author and some of his former colleagues.

Suki Kim said she met former WNYC "The Takeaway" host John Hockenberry in 2014 as a guest on the radio program. He later sent her a series of emails that made her uncomfortable, asking for her home address so he could write her letters and entitling a subject line: "Need another dose of you."

He left the radio show in August, saying it was time to move on.

After the accusations against media mogul Harvey Weinstein broke, Kim decided to ask Hockenberry's former colleagues about whether they ever felt uncomfortable, and she published a report on New York Magazine's website . One former colleague, Kristen Meinzer, said he made unwanted advances and wrote her sexually-explicit notes through social media. She eventually left the show.

Others reported similar behaviour but did not want to be named in the story. Kim, author of "Without You, There Is No Us: Undercover Among the Sons of North Korea's Elite" had complained to the station in February.

New York Public Radio CEO and President Laura Walker declined to comment for the magazine's story. A statement from "The Takeaway" posted on Twitter said the show was disturbed by the report and takes the allegations very seriously.

Hockenberry issued a statement to the magazine, saying that he was horrified people felt uncomfortable.

"I've always had a reputation for being tough, and certainly I've been rude, aggressive and impolite. Looking back, my behaviour was not always appropriate and I'm sorry. It horrifies me that I made the talented and driven people I worked with feel uncomfortable, and that the stress around putting together a great show was made worse by my behaviour."

"Having to deal with my own physical limitations has given me an understanding of powerlessness, and I should have been more aware of how the power I wielded over others, coupled with inappropriate comments and communications, could be construed. I have no excuses," said Hockenberry, who is in a wheelchair after being paralyzed in high school following a car accident.

Hockenberry, WNYC and its parent company did not immediately respond to The Associated Press' request for comment.

"The Takeaway" has 2.7 million weekly listeners and is broadcast on more than 270 stations. It's now hosted by Todd Zwillich.

The 61-year-old Hockenberry hosted "The Takeaway" from 2008 until earlier this year and is a four-time Emmy Award winner.

News from © The Associated Press, 2017
The Associated Press

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