Veteran news anchor Leon Harris announced his departure from NBC4 Washington on Tuesday, several months after concerning viewers during a Thanksgiving broadcast that left him appearing âunwell,â according to a statement posted on the stationâs website.
In his farewell message, the 63-year-old journalist, who had been with NBC4 since 2017, explained, âMany of you have kindly asked about me over the past few months. As you know, I took time off to focus on my health and family.â
Harris cited his â40+ years of nonstop workâ and âdramatic changes in the news and television industryâ as factors in his âdifficult decision to step awayâ from the anchor desk. âThis is the right time to prioritize my health and family,â he said.

The announcement comes after Harris initially took leave in December âto focus on health issuesâ following a Nov. 28 segment that prompted an outpouring of viewer worry. While covering a vandalism story, Harris appeared to struggle reading the teleprompter, slurring words and stumbling over sentences.
Meteorologist Ryan Miller attempted to reassure audiences that evening, stating on-air, âWe want to assure you that our colleague Leon Harris is fine.â The incident occurred just over a month after Harris returned from a September leave to recover from broken foot surgery.
NBC4 praised Harrisâ contributions in their own statement Tuesday. âWe are grateful for Leonâs eight years of service to our newsroom. We thank him for his commitment to our community, dedication to journalism, hard work, and friendship. He will be missed, and we wish him nothing but the best.â
Harris, an Akron, Ohio native, has faced previous health challenges during his long career in the D.C. market, which began at ABC affiliate WJLA in 2003. In 2013, he battled life-threatening necrotizing pancreatitis, which he speculated could have stemmed from a âperfect stormâ of family history, supplements, and alcohol use, per a Washington Post interview.
The anchor has also been open about struggles with alcoholism, including DUI arrests in 2013 and 2022. After pleading guilty to the latter incident, which resulted in a brief jail sentence and probation, Harris pledged that his âalcoholism will not be the end of me, but my acknowledging it is going to be a new beginning.â
Prior to his time in the capital, Harris spent over a decade as an award-winning anchor at CNN, covering major stories like the O.J. Simpson trial and the 9/11 attacks. His professionalism has earned him widespread respect, with support pouring in on social media following news of his exit.