Current:Home > ScamsSage Steele leaves ESPN after settling her lawsuit over COVID-19 vaccine comments -Secure Horizon Growth
Sage Steele leaves ESPN after settling her lawsuit over COVID-19 vaccine comments
View
Date:2025-04-14 14:07:14
ESPN and host Sage Steele have settled a lawsuit she filed after being disciplined for comments she made about the company’s policy requiring employees to get vaccinated against COVID-19.
Steele posted on social media Tuesday that she is leaving the Bristol, Connecticut-based company, where she has worked since 2007.
“Having successfully settled my case with ESPN/Disney, I have decided to leave so I can exercise my first amendment rights more freely,” she wrote. “I am grateful for so many wonderful experiences over the past 16 years and am excited for my next chapter!”
Steele was taken off the air for 10 days in October 2021 and pulled from several high-profile assignments, including including coverage of the New York City Marathon, the Rose Parade, and the annual ESPNW Summit, because she criticized ESPN and The Walt Disney Co.'s requirement that employees be vaccinated against COVID-19, according to her lawsuit, which was filed in May 2022 in Connecticut Superior Court.
She also was required to make a public apology, the lawsuit said.
Steele’s comments critical of ESPN came while she was speaking on a podcast hosted by former NFL quarterback Jay Cutler and just after getting the vaccine herself to comply with the policy, according to her lawsuit.
She said that while she respected everyone’s decision to get vaccinated, she believed that a corporate mandate was “sick” and “scary to me in many ways.” She also indicated that she did not want to get vaccinated but did so to keep her job and support her family, according to the lawsuit.
Steele also said on the podcast that she identifies as biracial and questioned former President Barack Obama’s decision to identify himself as Black on the recent U.S. Census. She also said that female journalists “need to be responsible as well” if inappropriate comments are directed at them based on how they’re dressed.
ESPN “forced Steele to apologize, allowed media to destroy her, and let media reports that she had been suspended go unchallenged, and allowed Steele’s colleagues to defame her in violation of company policy without so much as a reprimand,” her lawyers wrote in the lawsuit.
In June, ESPN offered to settle the lawsuit for just over $500,000 plus attorneys fees and costs.
The terms of the settlement disclosed Tuesday were not immediately made public, and Steele’s attorneys did not immediately return emails seeking comment.
ESPN issued a statement confirming only Steele’s departure from the network.
“ESPN and Sage Steele have mutually agreed to part ways,” spokesman Josh Krulewitz wrote. “We thank her for her many contributions over the years.”
___
AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports
veryGood! (92)
Related
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Missouri set to execute death row inmate David Hosier for 2009 murders after governor denies clemency
- US Coast Guard boss says she is not trying to hide the branch’s failure to handle sex assault cases
- Southern Baptists to decide whether to formally ban churches with women pastors
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- Six years after the Parkland school massacre, the bloodstained building will finally be demolished
- Celtics' Kristaps Porzingis has 'rare' left leg injury, questionable for NBA Finals Game 3
- Key witness at bribery trial of Sen. Bob Menendez faces grueling day of cross-examination
- 'Most Whopper
- Transit bus leads Atlanta police on wild chase after officers respond to dispute, police say
Ranking
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- The Daily Money: Is inflation taming our spending?
- Man charged after firing gun at birthday party, shooting at sheriff's helicopter, prosecutors say
- Fire kills hundreds of caged animals, including puppies and birds, at famous market in Thailand
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Genius Products That Will Make Your Life so Much Easier (and Cost Less Than $10)
- Diana Taurasi headlines veteran US women's basketball team for Paris Olympics
- Officer uses Taser on fan who ran onto GABP field, did backflip at Reds-Guardians game
Recommendation
Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
Maren Morris came out as bisexual. Here's the truth about coming out.
RTX, the world's largest aerospace and defense company, accused of age discrimination
Traffic resumes through Baltimore’s busy port after $100M cleanup of collapsed bridge
Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
Biden administration to bar medical debt from credit reports
Is honeydew good for you? A nutrition breakdown
Ukraine says its forces hit ultra-modern Russian stealth jet parked at air base hundreds of miles from the front lines