Fox
to investigate sexual harassment claim against O'Reilly
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[April 10, 2017]
By John McCrank
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Fox
News parent Twenty-First Century Fox Inc said on Sunday
it will investigate a sexual harassment claim against TV
anchor Bill O'Reilly, who has seen several companies
pull their ads from his top-rated news show in the past
week.
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The investigation comes after a complaint was phoned in to
the network's corporate hotline last week by Wendy Walsh, a
former regular guest on Fox's "The O'Reilly Factor" TV show, and
her lawyer, Lisa Bloom, which the two posted to YouTube.
"21st Century Fox investigates all complaints and we have asked
the law firm Paul Weiss to continue assisting the company in
these serious matters," the company said in a statement.
Walsh, a psychologist and radio host, said O'Reilly reneged on
an offer to secure her a lucrative job on the network after she
declined his invitation to join him in his hotel suite after a
dinner in early 2013.
"I'm told that they are taking it seriously, and they are going
to do the investigation that's legally required of them," Bloom
told CNN on Sunday.
Fox and O'Reilly have paid $13 million to five women who accused
him of sexual harassment, the New York Times reported last
weekend. O'Reilly said in a statement then that he had been
unfairly targeted because of his prominence and has not made
further comment.
Numerous companies have pulled ads from O'Reilly's Fox News show
since the report, including BMW of North America, Allstate Corp,
French pharmaceuticals maker Sanofi SA, direct marketer Constant
Contact, men's clothing company Untuckit and mutual fund
operator T. Rowe Price. British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline Plc
said it temporarily suspended its advertising.
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Fox News, the top-rated cable news network, has faced heightened
scrutiny of its workplace climate after sexual harassment
allegations led to the resignation of founding Chairman Roger Ailes
last year.
21st Century Fox hired law firm Paul Weiss to investigate Ailes.
On April 3, Democratic political consultant and Fox News contributor
Julie Roginsky sued the network and Ailes, accusing them of denying
her a permanent hosting job after she rebuffed Ailes' sexual
advances.
Roginsky said that a misogynistic culture at Fox News had not
changed since Ailes left the network.
(Additional reporting by Lisa Richwine in Los Angeles; Editing by
Lisa Shumaker)
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