Chattanooga Times Free Press

CBS looks into misconduct claims of CEO Moonves

- BY ALEXANDRA OLSON

NEW YORK — CBS said Friday it is investigat­ing personal misconduct claims after the company’s chief executive, Les Moonves, was the subject of a New Yorker story detailing sexual misconduct allegation­s.

The media company said independen­t members of its board of directors are “investigat­ing claims that violate the company’s clear policies” regarding personal misconduct.

CBS Corp.’s stock fell 6 percent — its worst oneday loss in nearly seven years — as the reports of the misconduct allegation­s began to circulate around noon Friday, triggering investor concerns Moonves might be forced to step down. The CBS chief has been a towering figure in television for decades, credited with turning around a network that had been mired for years at the bottom of viewership ratings.

The New York-based company did not mention Moonves by name but said it issued a statement in response to the New Yorker article, which was published on the magazine’s website late Friday. The article was written by Ronan Farrow, who wrote a Pulitzer Prize-winning story last year for the same magazine uncovering many of the allegation­s against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein.

The article says six women who had profession­al dealings with Moonves said he sexually harassed them between the 1980s and late 2000s. Four of the women described forcible touching or kissing during business meetings, it says, while two said that Moonves physically intimidate­d them or threatened to derail their careers.

Among the women quoted in the article were the actress Illeana Douglas, writer Janet Jones and producer Christine Peters. Farrow told The Associated Press that all the women quoted in the article had to overcome “a lot of fear of retaliatio­n to tell very serious stories of sexual misconduct about Les Moonves.”

Moonves acknowledg­ed in a statement that there were times decades ago when he may have made some women uncomforta­ble by making advances. But he said, “Those were mistakes, and I regret them immensely.”

He said that he never misused his position to harm or hinder anyone’s career.

The New Yorker article also said a culture of misconduct extended from Moonves to other parts of the corporatio­n, including CBS News. It said men in that division accused of sexual misconduct were promoted, even as the company paid settlement­s to women with complaints.

CBS said once the investigat­ion by its independen­t board members is completed, the full corporate board will review the findings and “take appropriat­e action.”

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Les Moonves

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