Los Angeles Times

Fox, former anchor sued

Woman who settled with Bill O’Reilly alleges defamation, breach of contract.

- By Stephen Battaglio stephen.battaglio @latimes.com Twitter: @SteveBatta­glio

Former Fox News producer Rachel Witlieb Bernstein is suing Bill O’Reilly and Fox News for defamation and breach of contract, alleging they violated a settlement she reached with the fired cable anchor.

In a lawsuit filed Monday in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, Bernstein said O’Reilly and Fox News broke their nondisclos­ure agreement in remarks to the New York Times.

The April 1 story recounted how the anchor and network had paid $13 million in settlement­s over the years to her and other women who had complained that O’Reilly had abused or sexually harassed them during their employment.

Bernstein complained in 2002 that she was mistreated by O’Reilly when she worked for the network, and ultimately reached a settlement agreement with the network.

Her story was among those included in the New York Times report, although her suit said she was not the source of the informatio­n.

Her financial settlement with Fox News required both sides not to disparage the other and only say the matter had been resolved. Unlike the other settlement­s made by O’Reilly and Fox News, Bernstein’s complaint did not involve sexual harassment.

Bernstein alleges that O’Reilly had defended the payouts in the New York Times and other publicatio­ns by portraying her as a “liar and politicall­y motivated extortioni­st.”

In the New York Times story, O’Reilly said he paid Bernstein and other women who complained because he’s “vulnerable to lawsuits from individual­s who want me to pay them to avoid negative publicity.” In another widely published statement, he said, “the worst part of my job is being a target for those who would harm me and my employer, the Fox News Channel.”

O’Reilly was fired April 19 from Fox News after a 20year run at the cable network. He was the network’s top-rated personalit­y for most of that time.

The suit also said that Fox News parent company 21st Century Fox falsely said in the story that there had never been any harassment complaints made against O’Reilly on a company hotline.

Bernstein said there was no hotline in existence at the time of her employment.

Bernstein alleges in her suit that she complained repeatedly about O’Reilly’s mistreatme­nt of her to the company’s human resources department and top Fox News executives, but nothing was done. O’Reilly screamed at Bernstein in front of other employees, according to the New York Times.

“This cynical falsehood about a nonexisten­t hotline was made to bolster O’Reilly’s claim that the women who received settlement­s must have fabricated their claims or they would have complained,” said Bernstein’s attorney, Nancy Erika Smith, whose Montclair, N.J., law firm Smith Mullin represente­d Gretchen Carlson in her suit against former Fox Chief Executive Roger Ailes.

Fox News did not respond to a request for comment on the lawsuit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States