Lodi News-Sentinel

Fox news drops Bill O’Reilly after harassment claims

- By Stephen Battaglio

Fox News has officially cut ties with its biggest prime time star, Bill O’Reilly, following sexual harassment claims lodged against him.

“After a thorough and careful review of the allegation­s, the Company and Bill O’Reilly have agreed that Bill O’Reilly will not be returning to the Fox News Channel,” 21st Century Fox said in a statement.

O’Reilly — the network’s signature talent who used his cable news fame to become a best-selling author, live tour attraction and TV producer — has been off the air since April 12. He was scheduled to return from a vacation Monday, but a permanent replacemen­t is expected to be named for his time period before that time.

O’Reilly’s behavior has been under scrutiny since an April 1 report in the New York Times that said he and Fox News have paid $13 million in settlement­s against women who have accused him of sexual harassment or abusive behavior going back to 2002. As a result, advertiser­s moved their spots out of his program, “The O’Reilly Factor,” which has the highest ratings in cable news.

The matter reached a crisis level this week because the law firm Paul Weiss is investigat­ing a claim that O’Reilly reneged on offering a paid contributo­r’s job to Wendy Walsh, a frequent guest on his program, after she spurned his advances at a dinner meeting in 2013.

Walsh does not have a legal claim against O’Reilly due to the statute of limitation­s on harassment cases in New York and California, but she did report the matter to the human resources hotline of the company earlier this month.

On Tuesday, 21st Century Fox received an anonymous complaint against O’Reilly from a black female employee who claimed that the anchor had “leered” at her and referred to her as “hot chocolate” in 2008.

The decision to oust O’Reilly was a tricky one for Fox News because he is the network’s most popular anchor. But the Murdoch family, which controls Fox News parent 21st Century Fox, faced pressure to act in the face of mounting negative publicity surroundin­g the sexual harassment claims against O’Reilly.

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