TPM LiveWire

More Details On Top Wash Times Editor's Discrimination Complaints

Spread the word. Share this article on Facebook!

Share

Richard Miniter (inset)

Share

Twitter Facebook Fark Reddit Send to a Friend

Send to a friend!

To email:    Your Name:    Your email:

Washington Times Editorial Page Editor Richard Miniter met with an official of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission for nearly three hours yesterday to file the complaint alleging age, disability, and religious discrimination that we told you about yesterday, his lawyer tells TPM. You can read the complaint right here.

The employment status of Miniter, who was named vice president of opinion in March and is still on the masthead of the paper (see a picture of yesterday's edition below), is in dispute.

In the Washington Post article on the complaint, published last night following TPM's reporting on Miniter, Howard Kurtz reports that Miniter was hired as a consultant in October 2008. The Uniification church mass wedding that Miniter charges he was forced was in December 2008 in New York, before he was named to the editor position. The Post adds:

[Miniter] said in an interview that he "was made to feel there was no choice" but to attend the ceremony if he wanted to keep his job, and that executives "gave me examples of people whose careers at the Times had grown after they converted" to the Unification Church.

The complaint charges that Times publisher Tom McDevitt "coerced" Miniter into attended the event, in which Rev. Sun Myung Moon married a few dozen couples. The complaint also alleges that Miniter was investigated by the Times after joking about "Moon's long, flowing garb in a church brochure," according to the Post.

McDevitt and the spokesman for the Times have not responded to calls seeking comment about this and other recent stories on the paper.

Miniter's complaint charges that he was terminated by the Times in October, after being asked to work at home in July. It says he refrained from seeking other employment in the intervening months.

Miniter's full complaint is here, and the masthead of yesterday's paper, featuring Miniter in the center column, is below.

Late Update: Asked what's next, Larry Klayman, Miniter's attorney, tells TPM this morning: "We are working on round two."

Join the Conversation!

4 comments

Recommend Recommend (0)

November 18, 2009 9:51 AM   

Working for a company directly owned and tightly controlled by an extreme right-wing international (foreign) church, whose stated goal is to turn the United States of America into a Moonie totalitarian theocracy - now how could that not be a good career move?

Reply | Flag Abuse

Are you sure this comment violates TPM's Terms of Service?

November 18, 2009 10:35 AM   

One of my favorite lines is, "If a conservative is a liberal who just got mugged, then a liberal is a conservative that just got arrested."

How low can it be for a "Christian", white, conservative to have to go the EEOC, a term that just screams "Libural"? (Yes. I know.)

Frivolous lawsuits my tush.

Reply | Flag Abuse

Are you sure this comment violates TPM's Terms of Service?

November 18, 2009 10:49 AM   

Why did he sign on to be editorial page editor months after he was forced to go to a weird cult event?

Reply | Flag Abuse

Are you sure this comment violates TPM's Terms of Service?

November 18, 2009 2:41 PM   

And why did he not look for work after being asked to work from home, without contact with his colleagues?

A brief review of his past "work" could lead you to believe he doesn't play well with others. Maybe the WT was only protecting itself and its employees.

Can't wait for the discovery phase!

Reply | Flag Abuse

Are you sure this comment violates TPM's Terms of Service?

Leave a comment

Your response:

Follow us!

Most Popular

TPM Stories Now Surging on