Cuban donates $10M after workplace probe
DALLAS — Mavericks owner Mark Cuban has agreed to contribute $10 million to women’s causes and domestic violence awareness as part of the NBA’S investigation into workplace conditions with his franchise.
The league also announced Wednesday that it would require staffing, reporting and policy changes for the Mavericks seven months after a Sports Illustrated report detailed years of examples of a hostile workplace for women on the business side of the operation.
There were also allegations of sexual misconduct against former team president Terdema Ussery. He worked for Cuban for 15 years and was investigated by the Mavericks over similar allegations in 1998, two years before Cuban bought the team. The league investigation determined Cuban wasn’t aware of Ussery’s actions.
Cuban asked two former prosecutors to investigate the complaints and the franchise’s workplace practices.
Soon after the SI report, Cuban hired former AT&T executive Cynthia Marshall as CEO. The NBA made note of that and other staffing changes the Mavericks had already implemented. college football: demetreius Mayes, an 18-year-old freshman linebacker at Central Florida, has been suspended indefinitely from football activities after his arrest on a sexual battery charge. ... South Carolina trustees have approved $21 million worth of improvements for Williams-brice Stadium scheduled for completion before the 2020 season. NHL: The Sabres signed forward sam Reinhart to a two-year contract worth $7.3 million. soccer: cristiano Ronaldo was dismissed in the 29th minute of his first Champions League match with Juventus after tangling with Valencia’s Jeison Murillo.