Former Fox Sports reporter Julie Stewart-Binks accuses a top executive
of sexual assault
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[February 01, 2025]
By MARTHA BELLISLE
A former Fox Sports reporter and anchor filed a lawsuit Friday against
the network and top executive Charlie Dixon, saying he sexually
assaulted her after coaxing her up to his hotel room to discuss Super
Bowl plans in 2016 and was later pushed out of her job for fighting
back.
Julie Stewart-Binks said in her complaint, filed in Los Angeles County
Superior Court, that she was inspired to speak up after a former
hairstylist for Fox Sports filed a lawsuit on Jan. 5 saying a former
host had made repeated unwanted sexual advances toward her and that
Dixon had groped her.
Andrew Fegyveresi, a spokesperson for Fox, said in an email that the
claims had been addressed.
“These allegations are from over eight years ago," his email said. "At
the time, we promptly hired a third-party firm to investigate and
addressed the matter based on their findings.”
Fegyveresi did not respond to a request to elaborate on what the
investigation found or how their findings were addressed.
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The Associated Press does not generally identify those who say they have
been sexually assaulted or subjected to abuse unless they have given
permission to identify them. Stewart-Binks' lawyers said she gave the AP
permission to use her name.
Stewart-Binks covered soccer and hockey in Canada and moved to Los
Angeles in 2013 to join the team at Fox Sports 1, the lawsuit said. She
was invited to cover the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics as a host and
returned to report on the NHL's Los Angeles Kings, the Stanley Cup
playoffs and the U.S. men's and women's national soccer teams. In the
fall of 2014, she was the main sideline reporter for the Anaheim Ducks.
Jamie Horowitz became president of Fox Sports in May 2015 and hired
Dixon two months later to be the executive vice president of content,
the lawsuit said. “The two had the power to pick and choose who would be
on camera for the networks,” the lawsuit said.
In the buildup to the 2016 Super Bowl, plans were underway for the show
“Jason Whitlock's House Party By the Bay” and Stewart-Binks was told she
was going to appear on the program, the lawsuit said. The night before
her meeting with the show's team, she received a text from Dixon asking
her to meet him at his hotel, the lawsuit said.
According to the lawsuit, Dixon told her they needed to talk about the
show, and then began berating her, saying he didn't want her going to
the Super Bowl because she wasn't “funny, interesting or talented.” He
said she wasn't “capable of handling big moments on TV" and people would
only watch if she got on the bar and took off her top," the lawsuit
said.
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This undated photo provided by Ayazi Abney APC law firm shows former
Fox Sports reporter and anchor Julie Stewart-Binks. (Scott McDermott
via AP)
 As Stewart-Binks scrambled to come
up with a response that would show her talent, Dixon invited her to
his hotel room to see the view from his balcony, the suit said. She
agreed, reluctantly. But once on the balcony, Dixon pushed her
against the wall, pinned down her arms, pressed his body against
hers and tried to force his tongue into her mouth, the lawsuit said.
Stewart-Binks pushed him away and ran from the room, the suit said.
She didn't say anything about it at the team's Super Bowl meeting
the following day and she was confirmed to appear on the Whitlock
show. However, she was told that she had to confront New England
Patriots tight end Ron Gronkowski about his stint at a stripper in
college.
She resisted the idea of asking for his “Magic Mike" moves but after
Dixon's comments the night before, she wanted to prove that she
could be fun, so she asked for a lap dance, the lawsuit said.
Stewart-Binks said she faced an immediate backlash on social media
from people who said she was setting women back through her actions.
“Following Fox's direction, Stewart-Binks remained silent outwardly,
though Dixon's assault and the media's portrayal of her took a
profound emotional toll and left her in tears much of the time,” the
lawsuit said.
She only went public after seeing the lawsuit filed by the former
Fox hairstylist who made similar claims. Stewart-Binks' lawsuit
seeks unspecified damages for emotional distress and asks that Fox
be required to take action to prevent any current or future sexual
abuse.
“Ms. Stewart-Binks hopes that by seeking justice, and by doing so
publicly, sports networks will recognize the necessity of ridding
those who abuse power and those who protect them,” the lawsuit said.
Since leaving Fox Sports, Stewart-Binks has done work for many media
outlets including ESPN, CBS Sports, NBC Sports, and TNT. She also
was a correspondent for the CBC in Canada during its coverage of the
2024 Paris Olympics.
___
AP Sports reporter Joe Reedy in Los Angeles contributed to this
report.
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