Former New York Mets GM Jared Porter admits to inappropriate texts while with the Chicago Cubs

Jared Porter has acknowledged he sent inappropriate text messages to a reporter while he was a Chicago Cubs executive in 2016, which led to the New York Mets firing him as general manager in 2021 after just 38 days.

Porter made his first public comments on his firing during an episode of the “Baseball Isn’t Boring” podcast released Friday.

Porter was hired by the Mets from the Arizona Diamondbacks on Dec. 13, 2020, and fired on Jan. 19, 2021, about nine hours after an ESPN report detailing that he sent sexually explicit, uninvited text messages and images to a reporter.

“It was an inappropriate relationship for a lot of reasons, you know, both for me personally and also, of course, with the reporter,” Porter said. “So I want to be very accountable about that as I talk through it. But, yeah, when the article first came out, you know, it’s crazy, just a tremendous amount of fear, you know, shame. You know, there’s some people I reached out to.

“Obviously, I talked with my wife, my family, you know, and my co-workers at the time at the Mets about the situation but, yeah, it was obviously a really tough moment but, you know, I — like I said, like being accountable, like I put myself in that situation. You know, I made the decision to send the text message that I sent and I certainly shouldn’t have done it.”

Porter said because his hiring occurred during the coronavirus pandemic, he never met with Mets owner Steve Cohen and never visited his office at Citi Field.

Porter understood why Cohen and team president Sandy Alderson fired him.

“They had to make the best decision for the New York Mets when the article came out, and I knew they would. You know, I hold zero ill will toward them whatsoever. I do think they made the best decision for the Mets. It’s unfortunate that I put myself and put them in that situation.”

Porter said he spent about a week at an Arizona treatment center.

“I literally went from, you know, trading for Francisco Lindor a few weeks earlier to being at an inpatient mental health institute where I wasn’t allowed to have shoelaces in my shoes until I was deemed not to be a suicide threat,” Porter said.

Porter, who turned 45 on Tuesday, was suspended by Major League Baseball through the 2022 season.

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