Times Colonist

CBS settles Rose harassment lawsuit

- STEPHEN BATTAGLIO

NEW YORK — CBS News has settled a lawsuit filed by three female employees who claimed they were sexually harassed by the network’s former anchor Charlie Rose.

The suit filed in May by Sydney McNeal, Katherine Brooks Harris and Chelsea Wei alleged “that CBS management, numerous broadcaste­rs and studio staff witnessed Mr. Rose’s unlawful conduct” and failed to take any action to correct it.

A CBS News representa­tive said that the network has paid an undisclose­d sum to the women, who are no longer employees at the network. The amount they received was kept confidenti­al at their request.

The plaintiffs are continuing their legal action filed in New York State Supreme Court against Rose, 76, who is also named in the suit.

The three women, all in their 20s, worked at CBS This Morning while Rose was co-anchor on the program. McNeal and Harris went on to take jobs at Rose’s eponymous PBS talk show. They became unemployed when it was canceled in November 2017, the same month Rose was fired from CBS for his alleged misconduct.

The lawsuit described various incidents in which Rose allegedly made inappropri­ate sexual comments to the women.

They also claim that Rose was frequently “caressing and touching their arms, shoulders, waist and back, pulling them close to his body and kissing them on the cheek.”

Rose allegedly detailed his sexual conquests to McNeal and Harris and directed them to share details with him about their sex lives.

He allegedly suggested to them that they become lovers. The suit also claims that Rose used profane language to all three women when he was unhappy with their work.

Rose’s lawyer Bob Bodian said after the lawsuit was filed that the claims made by McNeal, Harris and Wei are “without merit.”

The case against Rose comes amid a wave of harassment claims that have upended CBS.

The company’s board is awaiting the results of an investigat­ion into allegation­s against former chief executive Leslie Moonves, who was ousted after an October report in the New Yorker that he had sexually assaulted a number of women over his career.

Rose’s ex-boss Jeff Fager, the former executive producer of 60 Minutes, also faced allegation­s of inappropri­ate workplace behaviour and was fired in September after sending a threatenin­g text to a CBS News correspond­ent reporting on the matter.

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