I’m the biggest hypocrite ever: Duggar

TLC has pulled all episodes of the long-running 19 Kids and Counting, a reality show featuring a large Christian family, after reports surfaced that Josh Duggar had molested underage girls as a teen. File photo: Brian Frank

TLC has pulled all episodes of the long-running 19 Kids and Counting, a reality show featuring a large Christian family, after reports surfaced that Josh Duggar had molested underage girls as a teen. File photo: Brian Frank

Published Aug 21, 2015

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LOS ANGELES, Aug 20 (Reuters) - Former reality TV star Josh Duggar on Thursday admitted cheating on his wife after reports that he had subscribed to the Ashley Madison affair website, apologising for being “the biggest hypocrite ever.”

“While espousing faith and family values, I have been unfaithful to my wife,” Duggar, 27, a former campaigner for family values who appeared on the TLC show “19 Kids and Counting,” said in a statement posted on his family's website.

“The last few years, while publicly stating I was fighting against immorality in our country I was hiding my own personal failures,” he added, calling himself the “biggest hypocrite ever.”

The Discovery Communications-owned network last month cancelled “19 Kids,” after disclosures in May that Duggar had sexually abused four of his sisters when he was a teenager, one of whom was under 10 years old at the time.

Duggar apologised in a statement, saying he “acted inexcusably,” and resigned from his job at Christian lobbying group Family Research Council.

In an earlier version of Duggar's statement posted on the family's website and reported by People magazine and Buzzfeed, he said “I have secretly over the last several years been viewing pornography on the internet and this became a secret addiction and I became unfaithful to my wife.”

The reference to pornography was removed in an updated version of the statement.

Duggar's parents, conservative Christians Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar, said on Thursday they were dismayed over the Ashley Madison reports concerning their son.

“When we learned of this late last night our hearts were broken,” they said in a statement.

Hackers this week dumped a batch of data stolen from the Ashley Madison website detailing millions of members. The site's tagline is “Life is short. Have an affair.”

Duggar is so far the highest-profile person found among the site's clientele.

A link to the statement was posted on the Duggar family's Facebook page but deleted after a barrage of comments from fans criticizing Josh Duggar for his actions. On Twitter, Duggar became a trending topic as users expressed their disapproval.

A TLC representative declined to comment on Thursday, but said the network is still scheduled to release “Breaking The Silence” on Aug. 30, a documentary on child sex abuse featuring Duggar's sisters Jill and Jessa, who publicly forgave him for molesting them in the past.

Duggar and his wife, Anna, were married in 2008 and have four children.

 

Reuters

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