Hall
of Fame NFL quarterback Warren Moon denies harassment claim
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[December 08, 2017]
By Frank Pingue
(Reuters) - Professional football Hall
of Fame quarterback Warren Moon denied accusations of sexual
harassment by a woman who was an executive assistant to the former
National Football League player at the sports marketing firm he
co-founded.
According to the lawsuit filed Monday in Superior Court in Orange
County, California, Moon required Wendy Haskell to share his bed
during business trips, wear lingerie and made unwanted sexual
advances while she worked as his executive assistant at Sports 1
Marketing.
Reuters was not independently able to verify the allegations.
"Warren Moon has yet to be served with the lawsuit filed by Wendy
Haskell, but he is aware of the claims contained in it. Mr. Moon
denies the claims by Ms. Haskell," his attorney, Daniel Fears, said
in a statement received by Reuters Thursday dated December 6.
"Mr. Moon contends these claims are meritless, and he has every
intention to vigorously defend himself in court."

A representative from Moon's company did not immediately respond to
Reuters when asked to comment on the allegations against the
61-year-old former quarterback.
According to the lawsuit, Haskell was hired by Sports 1 Marketing in
early July to be Moon's executive assistant, and her
responsibilities included traveling with him for speaking
engagements, charity events and personal appearances.
The lawsuit claims that Haskell traveled with Moon on an almost
weekly basis during her employment and that he made her stay in his
hotel room and share his bed.
Haskell alleges she was required to keep the bathroom door unlocked
when she showered and that Moon repeatedly entered the room. She
also claims that Moon grabbed her crotch while she was sleeping and
slipped a drug into her drink during a trip to Mexico in October
because he thought she was not "having fun."
The lawsuit also claims Haskell reported Moon's behavior to the
company's chief executive, David Meltzer, in October but they did
not investigate her claims. Haskell also says she was demoted after
making the complaints. She is still employed by the company.
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NFL and CFL football star Warren Moon speaks during a "Canada's
Sports Hall of Fame' inductees news conference in Toronto November
3, 2009. REUTERS/ Mike Cassese/File Photo

Moon, who played professionally in Canada before going on to star in
the NFL, is the co-founder and president of the Irvine,
California-based company, which was also named as a defendant in the
lawsuit.
"Wendy Haskell made the decision to right a giant wrong," her
attorney, Diana Fitzgerald, told Reuters late Wednesday in a
telephone interview from Miami. "She now joins a growing group of
valiant women who have decided essentially enough is enough.
"Right now we are experiencing a very powerful movement in our
country as we are witnessing a first generation of women who are not
going to take it anymore."
The NFL's Seattle Seahawks, where the former quarterback played for
two years, said in an email statement late Wednesday it had accepted
Moon's request for a leave of absence as the club's radio analyst.
After winning five consecutive championships in the Canadian
Football League, Moon moved on to the NFL for a 17-year career that
included stints with the Houston Oilers, Minnesota Vikings, Seahawks
and Kansas City Chiefs.
Despite spending his first six professional seasons in the CFL, Moon
was third all-time in NFL passing yardage and fourth in touchdown
passes at the time of his retirement in 2001. Five years later he
became the first black quarterback to gain induction into the Pro
Football Hall of Fame.

(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto; Editing by Jacqueline Wong
and Alden Bentley)
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