The shake-up comes after a former employee filed a $15 million lawsuit alleging that his boss made derogatory comments about Israel, women and the United States.
The suit claims the network retaliated against the employee after he complained about his boss making remarks such as “whoever supports Israel should die a fiery death in hell.”
Some 766 violent anti-Semitic acts were registered around the world in 2014, up from the 554 logged in the previous year, according to a Tel Aviv University center.