15 former employees of Washington's
NFL team allege sexual harassment - report
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[July 17, 2020]
Fifteen women who were once
employees for Washington's NFL team told The Washington Post in a
story published Thursday that they were sexually harassed during
their tenures with the club.
The Post's report details dozens of instances of alleged sexual
harassment and verbal abuse, citing interviews with more than 40
current and former employees, including the 15 women, as well as
text messages and internal company documents. The allegations, which
span from 2006 through 2019, primarily include inappropriate sexual
comments, unwelcome overtures and pressure to wear revealing
clothing.
Fourteen of the women spoke with The Post anonymously out of fear of
litigation, after many signed nondisclosure agreements upon leaving
the team. The Post said it asked the team to release the employees
from such agreements so they could speak openly, but the team
declined. Emily Applegate, a now 31-year-old who worked in
Washington's marketing department from 2014-15, spoke openly about
her experiences.
Among those accused of sexual harassment or verbal abuse, per The
Post, are former longtime radio announcer Larry Michael, former
director of pro personnel Alex Santos, assistant director of pro
personnel Richard Mann, former president of business operations
Dennis Greene and former chief operating officer Mitch Gershman.
Michael abruptly announced his retirement on Wednesday, and Santos
and Mann were fired earlier this week after tenures of more than 10
years with the team.
Team owner Daniel Snyder was not accused of misconduct with women,
per The Post, although several former employees said the team's
small human resources department and overall culture fostered an
environment in which misconduct was not punished. Snyder was accused
of belittling top executives, including mocking Greene for his time
as a male cheerleader in college.
Snyder, who bought the team in 1999, declined multiple interview
requests from The Post, and all other accused employees also
declined comment. The team has hired attorney Beth Wilkinson to
review the club's internal culture amid allegations of workplace
misconduct.
"We can confirm that our firm was retained by the team to do an
independent review of the team's culture, policies and allegations
of workplace misconduct," Wilkinson said in a statement Thursday.
Among the allegations detailed by The Post:
--Applegate said she was the subject of expletive-laced tirades from
Gershman, including him calling her "f-----g stupid," and requests
to wear a tight dress for a meeting with clients "so the men in the
room have something to look at."
--In 2018, Michael was heard on a recording saying how attractive he
found a college intern, according to several employees who heard the
audio, with one former female employee telling The Post it was
"disgusting." Per The Post, seven former employees said Michael
routinely used sexual and disparaging overtones to describe female
employees.
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The Washington Redskins team logo is seen on a vehicle parked
outside the NFL team's stadium FedEx Field after the team announced
it will be abandoning its controversial Redskins team name and logo
under pressure from sponsors to scrap the name criticized as racist
by Native American rights groups, in Landover, Maryland U.S., July
13, 2020. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
--Six former employees and two reporters accused Santos of
harassment via inappropriate overtures and comments about their
bodies. Per The Post, one incident in 2019 led to an internal
investigation after a reporter informed club management Santos had
pinched her, told her she had "an ass like a wagon" and repeatedly
asked her to date him.
--In separate text messages to two former female employees, per The
Post, Mann discussed whether one's breasts had been surgically
enhanced, and told another to expect "an inappropriate hug ... And
don't worry that will be a stapler in my pocket, nothing else."
--Multiple former female employees told The Post they were warned by
other female employees to avoid a staircase near the entrance to
team headquarters made of transparent plexiglass. One former female
employee told The Post she watched a male trainer walk step for step
underneath her while openly staring up her skirt from two floors
below.
--Five former employees told The Post that Greene urged women to
wear revealing clothing and flirt with wealthy suite holders.
In 2018, the New York Times published a story in which several
unnamed team cheerleaders said they were required to be topless
during a calendar photoshoot in Costa Rica in 2013, and that they
were also required to personally escort male sponsors and suite
holders at a nightclub. The report eventually led to Greene's
firing.
The Post's story Thursday comes on the heels of the NFL club
retiring its "Redskins" nickname and logo this week, following
corporate pressure to do so. A new name has yet to be announced.
Multiple reports have said that minority owners -- FedEx CEO Fred
Smith, NVR Inc. chairman Dwight Schar and Black Diamond Capital CEO
Robert Rothman -- are bidding to sell their shares in the team due
to dissatisfaction with Snyder's leadership.
The minority shareholders have hired the investment bank Moag &
Company to vet buyers, ESPN reported. The Athletic reported minority
owners have been trying to sell for "many months if not a year or
more."
(Field Level Media)
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