Another NBC Employee Accused Of Sexual Misconduct After Secretly Video Recording Female Teen Nanny

Another NBC Employee Charged With Sexual Misconduct After Secretly Video Recording Teen Nanny

Another NBC Employee Charged With Sexual Misconduct After Secretly Video Recording Teen Nanny

Yet another NBC employee, director Dan Switzen, has been busted and accused of secretly video recording his teenage nanny while in the bathroom, using a small spy camera installed in a box of tissues.

What is it with the out-of-control sex crimes being committed by people who work at NBC?

Dan Switzen joins disgraced other high profile sexual abusing NBC employees Mark Halperin, Matt Lauer, and Chris Matthews, among others, who thought that they were too important to bust.

We hope that every single man or woman abused at the hands of anyone in the media or in our government come forward, and make the actions of the abusers public so that they may be dealt with accordingly.

ALL OTHER MEN OR WOMEN WHO HAVE BEEN SEXUALLY HARASSED, ABUSED, RAPED BY PEOPLE IN THE MEDIA OR GOVERNMENT NEED TO COME FORWARD NOW WHILE THE IRON IS STILL HOT.

A longtime CNBC show director has been accused of spying on his teen nanny with a hidden bathroom camera, continuing a relentless string of sex scandals for NBCUniversal.

The New York Daily News reported Wednesday that Dan Switzen hid a spy camera in a tissue box in the bathroom of his Westchester, N.Y. home in order to spy on his teenage au pair.

According to authorities, a friend of the 18-year-old nanny discovered the camera in the bathroom on November 18.

The teens took the camera to police that evening and law enforcement found “incriminating” images on the memory card. Police secured a search warrant and arrested Switzen on a felony charge of unlawful surveillance.

The complaint filed reads, “He intentionally installed a video recording device in a tissue box located in his family’s bathroom to surreptitiously view a person dressing or undressing…at a place and time when (the victim) had a reasonable expectation of privacy without (her) knowledge or consent.”

Switzen’s lawyer, Jeffrey Chartier, said his client was released without bail and called him a “decent family man.”

According to his LinkedIn, Switzen has been with CNBC for 16 years and has credits as a director on “The Suze Orman Show” and “Power Lunch.”

Switzen and CNBC declined to comment on the allegations.

On Tuesday, Page Six reported that NBC was trying to crack down on sexual misconduct at the network after a string of high-profile allegations against Mark Halperin, Matt Lauer, and Chris Matthews.

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