
Neil deGrasse Tyson
Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson is the latest entertainment celebrity to face sexual-misconduct charges, saying he welcomes charges by Fox and National Geographic, producers of his TV show "Cosmos."
"For a variety of reasons, most justified, some unjustified, men accused of sexual impropriety in today's 'Me Too' climate are presumed to be guilty by the court of public opinion," Tyson wrote on Facebook. "Emotions bypass due-process, people choose sides, and the social-media wars begin."
Advertisement - story continues below
A Bucknell University physics and astronomy professor told the blog Patheos earlier this week that she felt he exhibited "creepy behavior" when they met in 2009. Another woman, a former assistant of Tyson's, said she quit due to his "predatory behavior."
A third woman alleged in a 2014 blog post that Tyson drugged and raped her while she was a graduate student at the University of Texas in Austin. Tyson offered on Saturday a detailed rebuttal to each allegation.
TRENDING: Prof rejects calls to resign after rebuking his 'woke' university
Responding to the 2009 incident, he wrote that he is only learning nine years after the alleged incident that she felt uncomfortable, and said he would have apologized at the time if he had known.
As for the former assistant, Tyson wrote that he had served her wine and cheese when she visited his home. When she told him later that she felt "creeped out," he said he "apologized profusely." He said she offered a hug before leaving.
Advertisement - story continues below
Tyson wrote that he had a "brief relationship" with a fellow astro grad student in the 1980s, and that "relationship faded quickly."
"More than thirty years later, as my visibility-level took another jump, I read a freshly posted blog accusing me of drugging and raping a woman I did not recognize by either photo or name," he wrote. "Turned out to be the same person who I dated briefly in graduate school."