KTLA

Jeffrey Toobin returns to CNN 7 months after exposing himself during Zoom call

Jeffrey Toobin leaves the Supreme Court after it finished the day's arguments on the health care law signed by President Barack Obama in Washington on March 27, 2012. The New Yorker has parted ways with longtime staff writer Toobin after he reportedly exposed himself during a Zoom conference last month. He had already been on suspension and is also on leave from CNN, where he has been a legal commentator. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak/Associated Press)

CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin returned to the network Thursday for the first time in more than seven months after he was caught masturbating on a Zoom call with former colleagues at The New Yorker.

Toobin, in an interview with CNN’s Alisyn Camerota, said that he was grateful to CNN for another chance and that he was “trying to become the kind of person that people can trust again.”


Camerota asked him bluntly, “what the hell were you thinking?”

“Obviously, I wasn’t thinking very well or very much,” he said.

Toobin was fired from The New Yorker after working there for 27 years, following an investigation into last October’s Zoom call. He said he has no excuse for his conduct, but that he mistakenly thought that he was off camera.

Being fired from the magazine was heartbreaking, he said.

“I thought this punishment was excessive,” he said. “But that’s why they don’t ask the criminal to be the judge in his own case.”

He said he’s been in therapy, apologized personally to those he let down and has been doing community service at a food bank. He apologized to CNN viewers.

“I’ve got a lot to rebuild,” he said. “But I feel very privileged and very lucky that I have the opportunity to do that.”

CNN said it had no statement about his return.

Following the interview with Camerota — done in studio and not remotely — Toobin launched into legal analysis of a California court decision overturning an assault weapons ban and upcoming events at the U.S. Supreme Court.

“Many of us have really missed having your legal analysis on our programs,” Camerota said, “so let me be the first to welcome you back.”