Alycia Lane (born May 10, 1972) is an American television journalist. Until October 2013, she served as weekday morning News presenter at KNBC-TV in Los Angeles. From September 2003 until January 2008, she was co-anchor of the weekday evening newscasts on KYW-TV in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Lane's contract with KYW-TV was terminated shortly after being arrested for allegedly striking a New York police officer and calling her a homophobic slur.
In 2000, Lane moved to Miami, after being hired as a reporter for Fox affiliate WSVN. She joined a rival station, NBC-owned WTVJ a year later and spent two years there before moving to Philadelphia and CBS-owned KYW-TV in September 2003. KYW-TV paired her with Larry Mendte on their 11:00 p.m. edition of CBS 3 Eyewitness News. Mendte had been wooed away from rival WCAU-TV where he led the station to #1 in the ratings in some newscast slots for the first time in 30 years. By early 2004 KYW-TV had experienced "an amazing 61%" rise in the show's Nielsen ratings. In 2005, she was awarded a local Emmy Award for co-hosting the annual "Holiday Traditions" special.
After her stint at KYW-TV, Lane moved to Los Angeles in July 2009 and was hired by NBC-owned KNBC on August 18. She debuted on the air on August 29 as anchor of the weekend editions of the Channel 4 News where she replaced Kim Baldonado. In February 2010, Lane became co-anchor of Today in L.A. on KNBC. In 2011, Lane received a National Edward R. Murrow Award for Writing on a special story about a mysterious disorder called 'Angelman Syndrome'. In addition, she has won multiple Emmy Awards at KNBC, along with two Golden Mic Awards.
In October 2013, KNBC announced that Lane was no longer employed by the station.
On January 30, 2008, Lane's lawyers filed a summons on her behalf, a preemptive move towards a lawsuit against KYW-TV in connection with her dismissal. Lane v. CBS Broadcasting, Inc. On February 19, 2008, lawyers for CBS, KYW-TV's parent company, sought to move Lane's state court writ to the U.S. District Court in Philadelphia, though a provision in Lane's contract stated that employment disputes were to be handled in New York, where the network is headquartered.
On June 19, 2008, Lane filed suit against KYW-TV and station manager Michael Colleran Allegation that she was exploited and Defamation. On December 12, 2013, Lane's lawsuit against CBS was dismissed after a hearing determined that Lane purposely destroyed evidence in the case. Philadelphia Common Pleas Court Judge Alan Tereshko ruled that it would be impossible for CBS to defend itself without Lane's laptop. In March, Tereshko also dismissed Lane's lawsuit against Mendte for the same reason.
Scandals
Bikini pictures
Assault charges
Dismissal from KYW-TV
After assessing the overall impact of a series of incidents resulting from judgments she has made ... we have concluded that it would be impossible for Alycia to continue to report the news as she, herself, has become the focus of so many news stories.
Lane's legal counsel, Paul Rosen, subsequently released a statement which challenged the station's reasoning:
The termination comes at a time when there has been absolutely no determination that Alycia is guilty of any wrongful conduct, and after KYW-TV has aired her categorical denial of the alleged charge that is pending against her. The termination is unfair because Alycia has never had an opportunity to defend against this charge, and tell her side of the story publicly, before KYW-TV has taken this unusual and unwarranted step to terminate her employment.
E-mail incident
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