Business & Tech

Minnesota Public Radio Fires DJ Eric Malmberg

"Our hosts have to be able to attract an audience that wants to listen to them and trusts them," the radio station said Wednesday.

The temperature on the Minnesota Public Radio headquarters reads -14 degrees as the area deals with record breaking freezing weather January 6, 2014 in St. Paul, Minnesota.
The temperature on the Minnesota Public Radio headquarters reads -14 degrees as the area deals with record breaking freezing weather January 6, 2014 in St. Paul, Minnesota. (Getty Images)

TWIN CITIES, MN — Minnesota Public Radio has fired Eric Malmberg, a DJ who was employed by 89.3 The Current. Wednesday's announcement comes after longtime MPR reporter Marianne Combs resigned Monday, saying the station did not allow her to fully investigate accusations of sexual misconduct against a DJ, who she did not name.

"Listeners and members have reached out to us, and we want to share the following. MPR has made the decision that the audience of The Current is best served by a programmatic change," the radio station said.

"As a result, Eric Malmberg will no longer be a DJ on The Current. Our hosts have to be able to attract an audience that wants to listen to them and trusts them and over the last 36 hours those conditions have changed for Malmberg."

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In an email, MPR confirmed with Patch that Malmberg was fired.

Combs said on Monday that she spent two and a half months investigating the allegations, gathering testimony from eight different women. The women say the man "sexually manipulated and psychologically abused them," she wrote on Twitter.

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"I also interviewed the directors of a summer church camp who told this DJ he was no longer welcome to volunteer there because of his inappropriate behavior with teenage girls," she continued.

"Despite this, my editors have failed to move forward on the story. They have countered that the DJ's actions were, for the most part, legal, and therefore don't rise to the level of warranting news coverage."

According to Combs, her editors acknowledge the DJ is "a real creep" but were concerned that running her story might lead to a lawsuit.

Numerous hosts and DJs employed by The Current posted the same tweet in support of Combs and the women who made the accusations.

In a statement emailed to Patch Monday, Duchesne Drew — the President of MPR — said he was "shocked" by Combs’ resignation, but that he fully supports the editors who reviewed her story.

"The MPR News editors decided that the story, which deals with complex and sensitive issues, is not ready to run because it does not meet our journalistic standards," Drew continued. "In fact, they were blindsided by Marianne’s resignation and expected that she was continuing to work on the story.

"The MPR News editors use discipline in applying our high standards for journalism. The MPR newsroom seeks independent legal counsel on First Amendment and other matters related to our reporting. Our editors, not attorneys, decide when a story is ready to run. Neither I nor any other members of senior leadership at Minnesota Public Radio or American Public Media Group were involved in shaping or reviewing the story. Doing so would have been inappropriate. In fact, there’s a firewall between the newsroom and senior leaders of the company."

Combs' resignation and the removal of Malmberg came less than a week after American Public Media fired Garrett McQueen, the state's only Black classical music host.

According to Drew and APM President Dave Kansas, McQueen was fired because he repeatedly made unauthorized programming changes.

"Our decision was not sudden and came after several conversations with Garrett over the past year regarding programming changes," they said in a statement.

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