Los Angeles Times

Charges declined

Prosecutor­s decline to file case in a woman’s sex assault allegation­s.

- By Richard Winton richard.winton @latimes.com

Moonves won’t face charges in one case.

The Los Angeles County district attorney has declined to file sexual assault charges against Leslie Moonves, the embattled chairman and chief executive of CBS Corp., saying accusation­s made against him date back three decades and therefore exceed the statute of limitation­s.

An unidentifi­ed woman reported the allegation­s last year to the Los Angeles Police Department. She had accused the network chief of sexual assault, assault and battery, and exposing himself, prosecutor­s said Tuesday. The woman alleged one of the incidents occurred in July 1986 and the other two on Jan. 1, 1988, according to the records.

On Tuesday, the district attorney’s office said the 1986 allegation was one of forced oral copulation.

“Victim encountere­d suspect through her employment in the television industry. Victim has reported multiple incidents of assault by the suspect,” prosecutor­s wrote in an official declinatio­n of charges, which was signed by Deputy Dist. Atty. Darci Purvis. “Victim disclosed the second two incidents to a friend approximat­ely a year before making report to law enforcemen­t.”

According to sources familiar with the LAPD investigat­ion, the woman worked with Moonves in the 1980s when he was an executive at the TV production company Lorimar. She alleged that he forced her to have sex with him in an office in 1986, and that two years later Moonves assaulted her and exposed himself. Detectives confirmed that the woman told a friend about the alleged assault and indecent exposure incidents in 1988.

Detectives forwarded their investigat­ion to the district attorney’s office in December, and prosecutor­s declined to file charges in February, said Greg Risling, a spokesman for the district attorney’s office.

California ended the statute of limitation­s on its most severe sexual assault charges last year. Before that, the limitation on those charges was 10 years.

Moonves did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

The disclosure follows publicatio­n of a New Yorker article last week in which six women had accused Moonves of sexually harassing them Some of them said they believe their careers were hampered after they rebuffed his advances. The incidents were alleged to have occurred in the 1980s and ’90s and in 2006.

On Monday, the company’s board of directors took the extraordin­ary step of launching an independen­t investigat­ion into the allegation­s. The board stopped short of suspending Moonves while the review is ongoing, a move that could pave the way for an eventual settlement with him.

Moonves issued a statement last week in response to the New Yorker article.

“I recognize that there were times decades ago when I may have made some women uncomforta­ble by making advances,” he said. “Those were mistakes, and I regret them immensely. But I always understood and respected — and abided by the principle — that ‘no’ means ‘no,’ and I have never misused my position to harm or hinder anyone’s career.”

It was unclear Tuesday whether the woman who spoke with LAPD investigat­ors was among the women featured in the New Yorker article.

 ?? Katie Falkenberg L.A. Times ?? STATUTE of limitation­s was cited in declining to charge Leslie Moonves.
Katie Falkenberg L.A. Times STATUTE of limitation­s was cited in declining to charge Leslie Moonves.

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