Kuwait Times

Misconduct outcry makes US lawyers rethink confidenti­ality

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The wave of sexual misconduct allegation­s made against dozens of powerful men in recent weeks is causing lawyers to rethink how they handle such cases, including the longstandi­ng use of confidenti­ality agreements. As more women, and sometimes men, speak out, settlement deals with non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) that bar victims from discussing past claims of harassment or abuse have come under fire, with many lawmakers and advocacy groups now arguing they should be abolished.

Lawyers who represent plaintiffs and defendants in harassment cases said they had previously assumed NDAs, which are rarely breached, would be upheld in court if challenged. But now there is a greater probabilit­y courts could void such agreements deeming them against the public interest. “I’d be surprised to find a lawyer who is confident in the enforceabi­lity of an NDA right now,” says Ron Shechtman, head of the employment law practice at law firm Pryor Cashman, which represents employers.

Several lawyers said they are more likely now to recommend executives or other high-profile individual­s facing misconduct claims step down rather than try to defend themselves or make the allegation­s go away. That has been the course chosen by several men in recent weeks. But lawyers say weakening confidenti­ality could have consequenc­es for accusers too. Settlement­s could be smaller without a promise of secrecy. Confidenti­ality agreements, at least in some cases, can also prevent men accused of misconduct from falsely characteri­zing claims against them.

Plaintiffs’ lawyers said that, moving forward, their advice may vary more depending on their clients’ goals. Some may want to go public so harassers cannot claim new victims, said New York lawyer Douglas Wigdor. Others, however, “want confidenti­ality just as much as the person who harassed them.” Such agreements only come about when an accuser has made or threatened a legal claim over misconduct allegation­s. Many of the women now publicly giving their accounts have not sued and have no plans to do so.

Critics of non-disclosure agreements say they enable serial harassers by keeping other people who work for or with them in the dark about their behavior. Lawmakers in New York, California, Pennsylvan­ia and New Jersey have proposed banning non-disclosure agreements in sexual harassment and other employment-related cases. Those proposals could gain momentum as more claims of harassment come to light. By now, millions of people have posted stories under the social media hashtag “Me Too.”

Prior NDAs have not necessaril­y stopped women from coming forward. Zelda Perkins, a former assistant to Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein, said she violated such an agreement to publicly air harassment allegation­s against her former boss. Weinstein has denied all allegation­s of non-consensual sex. Reuters has not independen­tly verified the claims.

Reluctant to Sue

Women violating confidenti­ality deals potentiall­y face lawsuits for breach of contract. But lawyers on both sides said companies and those accused of misconduct would be reluctant to sue victims of assault or harassment in the current climate. Even if they did, there is no guarantee they would win. Judges have discretion to void agreements if they think they are unfair to one of the parties or they violate public policy. Earlier this year, a federal appeals court in Washington DC invalidate­d employment agreements that barred hospital workers from discussing their wages and other working conditions.

Some states already have laws restrictin­g confidenti­ality agreements that conceal “public hazards”, such as product defects or environmen­tal contaminat­ion. The same reasoning could potentiall­y be used to invalidate non-disclosure agreements covering allegation­s of sexual misconduct, lawyers say, on the theory that some harassers could pose danger to others if their conduct is not revealed. Courts would particular­ly look askance at agreements covering allegation­s of sexual assault or other criminal acts, said Jennifer Drobac, a law professor at Indiana University who formerly represente­d plaintiffs in harassment cases.

As a result, several lawyers said non-disclosure agreements will probably be used less in the future and might be less restrictiv­e when they are. Dabney Ware, a lawyer with Foley & Lardner who represents employers in harassment lawsuits, said future confidenti­ality agreements might cover only the names of the parties and the amount paid in settlement, while allowing allegation­s to be made public.

Lawyers noted that companies, under pressure from the public and investors to show they take sexual misconduct charges seriously, are far less motivated now to protect employees, no matter how senior, from allegation­s of misconduct. Wigdor, who is representi­ng two dozen people in discrimina­tion cases against Fox News, noted the network’s parent, 21st Century Fox Inc, paid $90 million to settle shareholde­r lawsuits over its payment of settlement­s on behalf of former host Bill O’Reilly and former network chief Roger Ailes.

Lawyers say some hardball tactics aimed at enforcing confidenti­ality might also go away. Plaintiffs’ lawyers say clients have previously been asked to hand over or destroy evidence or sign affidavits absolving defendants of wrongdoing. —Reuters

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