Harassment case against Roger Ailes will
remain in New Jersey court
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[August 09, 2016]
By Daniel Wiessner
(Reuters) - Former Fox News Channel
Chairman Roger Ailes on Monday dropped a bid to move a sexual harassment
lawsuit by a former anchor from New Jersey to a federal court in New
York.
In the lawsuit filed last month in federal court in New Jersey, Gretchen
Carlson accused Ailes of repeatedly propositioning her for sex and said
he terminated her contract in June after she refused his advances.
Ailes, who resigned in the wake of the lawsuit, has denied the
allegations.
On Monday, lawyers for Ailes and Carlson said in a court filing that
Ailes would drop his petition to move the lawsuit to federal court in
Manhattan.
A lawyer for Ailes, Barry Asen, said in an interview that he would now
ask the judge overseeing the case to send it to arbitration in light of
an agreement Carlson signed with Fox News.
"We're trying to avoid a lot of excess litigation" by keeping the case
in New Jersey, Asen said.
Monday's agreement must be approved by U.S. District Judge Jose Linares
in Newark.
Carlson's lawyer, Nancy Smith, could not immediately be reached for
comment.
Last month, Smith in an interview said Carlson filed the case in New
Jersey because it was easier to travel there from her home in Greenwich,
Connecticut.
Ailes owns a mansion in Cresskill, an affluent suburb in northern New
Jersey.
After the lawsuit was filed, Fox News retained a prominent law firm to
conduct an internal review into whether Ailes harassed other women at
the top-rated cable news channel.
New York magazine and other news outlets have reported similar
allegations by other women, many of which are decades old and stem from
Ailes' time at other networks.
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Roger Ailes, former chairman and CEO of Fox News and Fox Television
Stations, answers questions during a panel discussion at the
Television Critics Association summer press tour in Pasadena,
California in this file photo dated July 24, 2006. REUTERS/Fred
Prouser/File Photo
Rupert Murdoch, the 85-year-old executive chairman of Fox News
parent Twenty-First Century Fox Inc <FOXA.O>, will assume Ailes'
role on an interim basis, the company said when Ailes resigned on
July 22. Ailes reportedly will be kept on as an informal adviser and
receive $40 million in severance.
The case is Carlson v. Ailes, U.S. District Court for the District
of New Jersey, No. 2:16-cv-04138.
(Reporting by Daniel Wiessner in Albany, New York; Editing by
Jonathan Oatis)
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