Ex-Fox News anchor accuses former boss
Ailes of sexual harassment
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[July 07, 2016]
By Daniel Wiessner and Lisa Richwine
(Reuters) - Former Fox News anchor
Gretchen Carlson sued Fox News Channel Chief Executive Roger Ailes on
Wednesday for sexual harassment, alleging her ex-boss wrongfully fired
her after she rebuffed years of unwanted advances.
Ailes, also the network's chairman, denied Carlson's allegations
late on Wednesday. The parent of Fox News, 21st Century Fox, said it
had begun an internal review of the matter.
Carlson, 50, charged in a lawsuit that Ailes, a former Republican
political consultant who built Fox News into the most-watched U.S.
cable news channel, took her off the morning show "Fox & Friends" in
2013 and cut her pay because she refused to have a sexual
relationship with him.
Lawsuits alleging sexual harassment typically name the employer as a
defendant, but Carlson’s lawyer, Nancy Erika Smith, said in an
interview that she had no reason to believe Fox condoned or
authorized Ailes' behavior.
Ailes was a consultant for several U.S. Republican presidents,
including George H.W. Bush. He has been a confidant of 21st Century
Fox Executive Co-Chairman Rupert Murdoch, who named Ailes founding
chief executive of Fox News Channel in 1996.
Ailes said in a statement he would defend himself against "false"
and "offensive" allegations.
"This is a retaliatory suit for the network’s decision not to renew
her contract, which was due to the fact that her disappointingly low
ratings were dragging down the afternoon lineup," Ailes' statement
said. He added that Carlson had thanked him in a recent book.
 The lawsuit filed in New Jersey state court accused the 76-year-old
Ailes of wrongfully firing Carlson and before that "ostracizing,
marginalizing and shunning her after making clear to her that these
'problems' would not have existed, and could be solved, if she had a
sexual relationship with him."
The suit also alleged that her "Fox & Friends" co-host Steve Doocy
treated Carlson as a "blond female prop," refusing to engage with
her on air and belittling her contributions. Doocy was not named as
a defendant in the lawsuit.
In a statement, 21st Century Fox said: "We take these matters
seriously."
"While we have full confidence in Mr. Ailes and Mr. Doocy, who have
served the company brilliantly for over two decades, we have
commenced an internal review of the matter," Fox said.
RECORD RATINGS
Fox News Channel, known for a lineup of politically conservative
commentators, is drawing record viewership. The network was the
most-watched channel in all of basic cable television with an
average of 2.2 million prime-time viewers, according to Nielsen data
through June.
Ailes personally intervened when Republican presidential candidate
Donald Trump made disparaging remarks about Fox News anchor Megyn
Kelly. In January, Fox acknowledged that Ailes had three
conversations with Trump ahead of a Fox News debate that the
candidate skipped.
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
Roger Ailes, 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 July 24, 2006. Picture taken July 24, 2006. REUTERS/Fred
Prouser/File Photo

Carlson's lawsuit, which said she was fired on June 23, said her
show achieved its highest ratings ever from October 2015 through
March 2016. She is seeking damages for lost compensation, damage to
her career and mental anguish. A Stanford University graduate and
former Miss America pageant winner, she joined Fox News in 2005.
Carlson's lawyer, Smith, said that since the lawsuit was announced,
she had heard from other women who worked with Ailes and had
complaints about his behavior.
Depositions and court hearings could expose issues the channel would
rather keep quiet, said Merrill Brown, who helped launch Fox News
competitor MSNBC.
"The airing of what could be potentially really dirty laundry ... is
something that anybody's boss, in this case Murdoch and his team,
should be apprehensive about," said Brown, director of Montclair
State University's School of Communication and Media.
But he said it would be "astonishing" if Fox ratings were hit in the
midst of the presidential election campaign. "This is going to be an
extraordinary several months," he said.
In 2005, Fox News agreed to pay $225,000 to settle a lawsuit by the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission that said a former
advertising executive sexually harassed a production assistant. A
year earlier, Fox News host Bill O’Reilly paid an undisclosed sum to
settle a lawsuit by a former producer who said the top-rated anchor
talked to her about sexual fantasies and masturbation.
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In a June 2015 blog on The Huffington Post, Carlson wrote that she
had been harassed early in her career and was speaking out for the
first time. "I had no real power, and I was worried that people
would blame me or consider me a troublemaker. Sound familiar?" she
wrote.
The case is Carlson v. Ailes, New Jersey Superior Court, Bergen
County, case number not immediately available.
(Reporting by Daniel Wiessner in Albany, New York, and Lisa Richwine
in Los Angeles; Editing by Bernard Orr and Peter Cooney)
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