The Columbus Dispatch

WexnerEpst­ein looked at again

- Sapna Maheshwari, Katherine Rosman, Jessica Silver-greenberg and James B. Stewart

It has been more than a year since L Brands, owner of Victoria’s Secret, said it was hiring a law firm to investigat­e its billionair­e founder Leslie Wexner’s close ties to the convicted sex criminal Jeffrey Epstein, but no findings have been made public and the review has seemed to fade from view.

Maybe a new law firm will fare better.

After Epstein’s July 2019 arrest, revelation­s about his sweeping power over the New Albany retail magnate’s fortune and how he may have used his link to the lingerie giant to prey on women prompted the company to swiftly declare that it had hired lawyers to conduct a ‘‘thorough review’’ of the matter.

The company enlisted Davis Polk & Wardwell, the law firm it had relied on for legal counsel for years, and which once employed Wexner’s wife, Abigail. Nothing about the scope of the investigat­ion has been released since, and many former Victoria’s Secret employees, including two who had interacted with Epstein, said they were never contacted by lawyers.

Now, a second inquiry has begun at the company. A shareholde­r lawsuit filed in May suggested Davis Polk was too close to L Brands to be truly independen­t. The shareholde­r said they asked the board in February to replace Davis Polk or hire another firm as a ‘‘check’’ for its review of Wexner and Epstein’s relationsh­ip.

Last month, at least five current and former Victoria’s Secret employees were surprised to hear from a new lawyer with no affiliation to Davis Polk. Sarah Eddy, a partner in the litigation department of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, said she was commencing a separate investigat­ion on behalf of two independen­t L Brands board members: Sarah Nash, who became its chairwoman this year, and Anne Sheehan.

In an email obtained by The New York Times, Eddy said her firm was investigat­ing ‘‘allegation­s raised in shareholde­r demand letters and civil complaints concerning, among other things, connection­s between L Brands and Jeffrey Epstein.’’

The former employees, who spoke on the condition of anonymity citing fear of retributio­n, all said they had received similar calls and emails. Shareholde­r complaints have also raised concerns about allegation­s of misconduct and a culture of harassment and misogyny at L Brands and its lingerie powerhouse, suggesting that the new

investigat­ion could be looking into those issues.

Nash, a former executive at JPMORgan Chase and CEO of Novagard Solutions, and Sheehan, an expert in corporate governance, joined the L Brands board last year after an activist investor pushed for more diversity and fewer directors with business and social ties to the Wexners.

Eddy declined to comment. A representa­tive for Davis Polk did not respond to requests for comment.

The new investigat­ion is the latest jolt for L Brands and Victoria's Secret, and comes months after the pandemic foiled a plan to sell the lingerie brand to a private-equity firm. Even before the revelation­s about Epstein, Victoria's Secret was battling a decline while facing criticism that its lingerie-clad models were out of step with current views of beauty. That put fresh attention on its management and the board of L Brands, which also owns Bath & Body Works.

Wexner, 83, has sought to distance himself from Epstein, who died in prison last August in what was ruled a suicide. But L Brands has also faced intense scrutiny about its workplace environmen­t.

Wexner stepped down as CEO and chairman of L Brands in May, but nearly all of Victoria's Secret's remaining top leaders are men he hired or promoted, including the brand's interim CEO, who was appointed to that role despite an extramarit­al affair with a subordinat­e that became widely known inside the company. The scarcity of women in the highest ranks of the company has frustrated some employees.

‘‘This year, we have amended our board governance, made significant policy changes, initiated a robust diversity and inclusion strategy, and greatly enhanced associate communicat­ion,'' Nash said in a statement. ‘‘It's truly a new day for L Brands and I'm excited about the progress we continue to make for our associates, customers and communitie­s we serve around the world.''

She said she was proud that half its board was now women.

Two current employees said they were cautiously optimistic that Wachtell's independen­ce could allow the new investigat­ion to address the company's workplace culture.

In May, the company's board said that Stuart Burgdoerfe­r, L Brands' chief financial officer for more than a decade, would also become interim CEO of Victoria's Secret. Some current and former employees wondered how significantly Burgdoerfe­r could improve the company's culture. Several years ago, while he was engaged in an extramarit­al affair with an L Brands employee.

The matter was never addressed internally with rank-and-file staff. Burgdoerfe­r and the employee, who left the company this year, were recently married.

Charles Mcguigan, the longtime chief operating officer of L Brands who departed in July, was also in a serious relationsh­ip with an employee who worked in store design and constructi­on. Five current and former employees said that the situation was viewed as particular­ly egregious because

Mcguigan also oversaw human resources for a time while in the relationsh­ip.

Brooke Wilson, a company spokeswoma­n, said the relationsh­ips ‘‘were fully and thoroughly disclosed to the appropriat­e people, including the board.''

Until last year, L Brands had given investors few reasons to complain. Wexner previously had a sterling reputation as the longest-serving CEO in the S&P 500 and was a major force in shaping the American mall through L Brands.

But the ties to Epstein, who had unusual control over Wexner's billions and obtained assets like a New York mansion and private plane through their connection, dented the tycoon's legacy. Earlier this year, three former L Brands executives told The Times that Wexner was alerted in the mid-1990s about Epstein's attempts to pitch himself as a recruiter for Victoria's Secret models, but the CEO did not appear to act.

In February, L Brands announced a plan to sell a majority stake in Victoria's Secret to the private-equity firm Sycamore Partners, whittling the public company down to Bath & Body Works.

Then the pandemic hit, dealing an outsize blow to mall chains, especially apparel sellers, and Sycamore backed out of the deal after some legal wrangling. In May, there was a management shuffle at Victoria's Secret and Bath & Body Works, which are still being run as separate companies within the publicly traded L Brands, and Nash replaced Wexner as board chair.

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