New York Daily News

BUMBLIN’, STUMBLIN’

ESPN harass suit alleges Berman left Hill ‘racially disparagin­g’ voicemail

- BY EVAN GROSSMAN

This. Could. Go. All. The. Way. ESPN legend Chris Berman, known for his bombastic football calls, is just one of the boldfaced names that appears in an explosive and far-reaching sexual harassment suit filed against the network in Connecticu­t district court Sunday by a former employee.

Berman, 62, is accused of leaving a “racially disparagin­g” voicemail for Jemele Hill two years ago, one of many examples used to paint a picture of a hostile workplace that existed at ESPN for women. Berman has not responded to the allegation­s but Hill issued a statement on Twitter Monday night calling the way the ‘conflict’ has been portrayed ‘dangerousl­y inaccurate.’

Hill acknowledg­ed having a ‘personal conflict’ with Berman ‘a few years ago’ but denied Berman left any racially disparagin­g remarks on her voicemail.

“Our conflict was handled swiftly and with the utmost profession­alism,” Hill wrote in her tweet.

Still, the network took another hit in the suit.

“ESPN is, and always has been, a company rife with misogyny,” reads the opening line of the complaint filed against the sports network that includes several big names beyond Berman.

Former ESPN host and legal analyst Adrienne Lawrence filed the suit, primarily claiming John Buccigross sexually harassed her during the two years she worked in Bristol. Lawrence claims ESPN did not address her complaints against Buccigross and believes she was let go last summer because she complained about the way she was being treated.

Former SportsCent­er host Jonathan Coachman and Bomani Jones are also named in the 85page complaint. Coachman, who now works for WWE, is accused of hitting on female colleagues, and Jones is accused of looking at Lawrence with “elevator eyes.”

He “slowly looked (Lawrence) up and down in a sexualized manner, making Ms. Lawrence feel extremely uncomforta­ble,” according to the suit, which alleges rampant mistreatme­nt of women at ESPN, including accusation­s that male executives “keep ‘scorecards’ naming female colleagues they are targeting for sex,” openly watch porn on their computers and make vulgar comments about women, sometimes in front of them. Lawrence alleges male colleagues regularly discussed which women in the office they’d like to have sex with, and in once case, talked about what Rihanna must “taste like” in front of Lawrence.

The 85-page complaint, prepared by Lawrence’s attorney, Brian S. Cohen, Esq., of Lachtman Cohen P.C. in Greenwich, Conn., reads like an oral history of sexual misconduct at ESPN going back to the 1980s.

Claims that ESPN is not a safe space for women resurfaced amid the #MeToo movement in December when the Boston Globe published an explosive expose that detailed some of Lawrence’s complaints and pointed a finger at, among others, Buccigross and fantasy sports analyst Matthew Berry for inappropri­ate behavior.

Berry has admitted to taking former model and sports personalit­y Jenn Sterger to a strip club when they were interviewi­ng at ESPN. He has said the off-site GETTY trip “was not a smart decision and I regret going.” As for a picture he took there in which he is pointing at Sterger’s breasts, Berry has said it is “personally embarrassi­ng and I did not mean any offense.”

Lawrence claims Buccigross made unwanted sexual advances under the guise of mentorship while she was trying to work her way up from the network’s “ESPN the Fellowship” program, which she joined after leaving a job working as a lawyer.

“After reaching out to her with the promise of mentorship, Buccigross exploited his position of authority over her by calling her ‘doll’ and coercing her to join him for dinner given his limited availabili­ty,” according to court papers, via the Connecticu­t Law Tribune. “The suit states the anchor ‘tried to groom’ Lawrence into a romantic relationsh­ip by garnering sympathy by divulging his history as an alleged sexual abuse victim.”

Former SNY and current ESPN announcer Chris Cotter is also accused of trying to kiss Lawrence but she rebuffed him, according to the suit.

Since the Globe story last year, text messages between Lawrence and Buccigross have been published. ESPN initially responded to the story by attempting to clear Buccigross of any wrongdoing. The network offered a partial exchange, which omitted a shirtless image Buccigross sent Lawrence of himself.

“In response to the Boston Globe story, we released portions of a text exchange to provide important context about their friendship,” ESPN had said in a statement. “While we didn’t include every message submitted in the legal proceeding, we felt the released portions capture the nature of the friendship over a period of months. We purposeful­ly excluded the pictures each party shared in the course of the text conversati­on.”

In a statement last year, Buccigross said he considered Lawrence a “friend” and, “I’m sorry if anything I did or said offended Adrienne. It certainly wasn’t my intent.”

Lawrence claims ESPN’s human resources department colluded with Buccigross to make her allegation­s disappear.

Now she wants those claims aired in a court of law.

 ?? ESPN, AP & ?? Chris Berman (clockwise from c.) is alleged to have left racially charged message for Jemele Hill, who denies claim, and former host Bomani Jones and current anchor John Buccigross are accused of sexually harrassing former analyst Adrienne Lawrence in...
ESPN, AP & Chris Berman (clockwise from c.) is alleged to have left racially charged message for Jemele Hill, who denies claim, and former host Bomani Jones and current anchor John Buccigross are accused of sexually harrassing former analyst Adrienne Lawrence in...

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