Former Fox News employee's suit accuses Ed Henry of rape
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[July 21, 2020]
By Helen Coster
(Reuters) - Former Fox News employee
Jennifer Eckhart filed a lawsuit on Monday in a New York federal court
against Fox News and former network anchor Ed Henry, accusing him of
raping her.
The complaint says Henry “groomed, psychologically manipulated and
coerced [her] into having a sexual relationship with him, and that, when
she would not comply voluntarily, he sexually assaulted her on office
property, and raped her at a hotel."
In a statement on Henry's behalf, his lawyer Catherine Foti said
evidence would show that Eckhart "initiated and completely encouraged a
consensual relationship."
In a separate statement, a Fox News spokeswoman said Eckhart and
co-plaintiff Cathy Areu, a network guest, can pursue their claims
against Henry directly with him, as the network “already took swift
action as soon as it learned of Ms. Eckhart’s claims on June 25 and Mr.
Henry is no longer employed by the network.”
The cable news network, owned by Rupert Murdoch’s Fox Corp <FOXA.O>,
said on July 1 it had dismissed Henry after receiving a complaint from
the lawyer of a former employee and retained a law firm to investigate.
Monday’s complaint alleges the network knew Henry had engaged in sexual
misconduct as far back as early 2017.
Areu alleges Henry sent her “a slew of wildly inappropriate sexual
images and videos” and suggested he would assist her career if she had
sex with him.
Areu also alleges that Fox News anchors Sean Hannity and Tucker Carlson,
host Howard Kurtz and political analyst Gianno Caldwell sexually
harassed and retaliated against Areu.
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A Fox News channel sign is seen on a television vehicle outside the
News Corporation building in New York City, in New York, U.S.
November 8, 2017. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
Asked to comment on the allegations in the lawsuit, Foti said: “Ed
Henry looks forward to presenting actual facts and evidence, which
will contradict the fictional accounts contained in the complaint."
In its statement the network said that based on an outside law
firm's investigation that included interviews with numerous
witnesses, it was determined that Areu’s claims against the network,
its management, Carlson, Hannity, Kurtz and Caldwell are "false,
patently frivolous and utterly devoid of any merit."
Reuters was not immediately able to reach Carlson, Hannity, Kurtz or
Caldwell but Fox News said its statement was a response on behalf of
all four men.
In 2016, Roger Ailes resigned as chairman and chief executive of Fox
News after former Fox News anchor Gretchen Carlson sued him for
sexual harassment, charges he denied.
The network agreed to pay $20 million to settle Carlson’s lawsuit.
(Reporting by Helen Coster; Editing by Howard Goller and Neil
Fullick)
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