LA Reid is sued by former music executive over alleged sexual assaults
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[November 09, 2023]
By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) - L.A. Reid, the music executive known for helping
develop superstars like Mariah Carey, Pink, TLC and Usher, was sued on
Wednesday by a former music executive who accused him of sexually
assaulting her more than two decades ago.
Drew Dixon said Reid, 67, derailed her once promising music industry
career after he became Arista Records' chief executive because she
rejected his advances, including two assaults that she said occurred in
2001.
Dixon, of Brooklyn, is seeking unspecified compensatory and punitive
damages in her lawsuit in Manhattan federal court.
A representative for Reid did not immediately respond to requests for
comment. Lawyers who have represented him on recent legal matters did
not immediately respond to similar requests.
Dixon sued under New York state's Adult Survivors Act, which gives
adults a one-year window to sue over alleged sexual abuse that occurred
long ago even if statutes of limitations have expired. The window closes
this month.
She is one of many women to accuse prominent entertainment industry
figures of sexual misconduct since the #MeToo movement began in 2017, in
the aftermath of accusations against now-imprisoned movie producer
Harvey Weinstein.
Now a board member at New York University's Clive Davis Institute of
Recorded Music, Dixon was a subject of the 2020 HBO Max documentary "On
the Record" concerning sexual misconduct accusations by women against
rap mogul Russell Simmons.
Dixon had also publicly accused Reid of misconduct in December 2017,
seven months after he left his position as Epic Records chief, where he
was also accused of improper behavior.
Reid told The New York Times at the time in response to Dixon's
accusations: "I'm proud of my track record promoting, supporting and
uplifting women at every company I've ever run. That notwithstanding, if
I have ever said anything capable of being misinterpreted, I apologize
unreservedly."
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Judge L.A. Reid poses at the party for the television series "The X
Factor" finalists in Los Angeles, California November 5, 2012.
REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni/File Photo
'FEMALE RICK RUBIN'
Dixon said Reid began harassing her shortly after his arrival at
Arista in 2000.
She said his first assault occurred in January 2001 when, on a
private plane flying executives to a Puerto Rico retreat, he played
with her hair, kissed her and penetrated her without consent.
Dixon said the second assault occurred several months later during a
ride home from an event in New York, where Reid groped, kissed and
penetrated her without consent.
According to the complaint, Dixon's career had earlier been on a
"meteoric trajectory" that led one industry insider to brand her the
"female Rick Rubin."
Dixon said that ended as Reid became "hostile" because she resisted
his demands, including that she meet him late at night in his hotel
and wear skirts instead of jeans, resulting in her budgets being
slashed and her artists being rejected.
She left the industry to 2002 to attend Harvard Business School.
Reid's "persistent campaign of sexual harassment and assault forced
me to abandon the work I loved when I was at the top of my game in
the music business," Dixon said in a statement provided by her
lawyers.
Dixon's mother Sharon Pratt, formerly known as Sharon Pratt Dixon
and Sharon Pratt Kelly, was mayor of Washington, D.C. from 1991 to
1995.
The case is Dixon v Reid, U.S. District Court, Southern District of
New York, No. 23-09878.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Additional reporting by
Steve Gorman and Mike Scarcella; Editing by Richard Chang)
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