The Borneo Post

Ousted Grammy CEO files explosive discrimina­tion complaint

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LOS ANGELES: The ousted chief of the organisati­on behind the Grammys filed a complaint on Tuesday accusing the Recording Academy of putting her on leave after she raised concerns about sexual harassment, voting irregulari­tes and other misconduct.

Deborah Dugan says in her 44-page complaint before the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission in Los Angeles that the Academy retaliated against her after she detailed the misconduct in December.

In her most explosive charge against the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, Dugan says that she was asked to hire her predecesso­r, Neil Portnow, as a consultant despite allegation­s that he had raped a foreign female recording artist, “which was, upon informatio­n and belief, the real reason his contract was not renewed.”

Dugan’s sexual harassment and discrimina­tion allegation comes just days before the Grammy Award ceremony is set to be held in Los Angeles on Sunday.

The complaint states that on December 22, she sent an email to the head of the Academy’s human resources department saying she had been sexually harassed by Joel Katz, an attorney who is general counsel to the Academy.

“The email also detailed egregious conflicts of interest, improper self-dealing by Board members and voting irregulari­ties with respect to nomination­s for Grammy Awards, all made possible by the ‘ boys club’ mentality and approach to governance at the Academy,” the complaint states.

It adds that after sending the email, Dugan put the Academy on notice that she planned to take legal action.

Dugan alleges that the Academy retaliated against her by putting her on leave on trumped-up charges of misconduct.

Dugan replaced Portnow last May, becoming the first woman to lead the Recording Academy.

In her complaint, she claims that an unidentifi­ed recording artist accused Portnow of raping her following a performanc­e she gave at Carnegie Hall in New York. Portnow could not be immediatel­y reached for comment on Tuesday.

In a statement to AFP, the Recording Academy disputed Dugan’s claims and said her actions would cast a shadow over the upcoming awards show.

“It is curious that Ms Dugan never raised these grave allegation­s until a week after legal claims were made against her personally by a female employee who alleged Ms Dugan had created a ‘toxic and intolerabl­e’ work environmen­t and engaged in ‘abusive and bullying conduct,’” the statement reads. — AFP

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