Houston Chronicle

‘Toxic work culture’ cited

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WASHINGTON — The Washington Commanders created a “toxic work culture” for more than two decades, “ignoring and downplayin­g sexual misconduct” and what former female employees described as hundreds of instances of sexual harassment by men at the top levels of the organizati­on, according to a report published Thursday by the House Committee on Oversight and Reform.

The misconduct included Commanders owner Dan Snyder, who is accused of inappropri­ately touching a former employee at a dinner, having staffers produce a video “of sexually suggestive footage of cheerleade­rs” and ordering that women auditionin­g to be cheerleade­rs walk on the field “while he and his friends gawked from his suite through binoculars,” according to the report.

The House committee opened its investigat­ion in October 2021 after the NFL did not release a written report of its review of the team’s workplace culture. The league’s independen­t review by attorney Beth Wilkinson was completed in summer 2021 and resulted in a $10 million fine to the team.

Drawing from hearings, interviews and deposition­s, the House report concluded Snyder interfered in its investigat­ion and Wilkinson’s review, which stemmed in 2020 from former employees alleging rampant sexual harassment by team executives.

The team owner interfered with the House committee’s investigat­ion by “intimidati­ng witnesses,” “refusing to release former employees from their confidenti­ality obligation­s” and using a “secret” agreement with the NFL to block access to more than 40,000 documents collected during Wilkinson’s review, according to the report.

Snyder also conducted a separate shadow investigat­ion, which the report said was used by his lawyers to “cast him as the victim of a defamation campaign ... and deflect responsibi­lity for the team’s toxic work culture.”

The House committee said Snyder was evasive, misleading and said more than 100 times he did not recall things during his deposition.

The NFL was not shielded from criticism in the committee’s report, which said the league “misled the public about its handling of the Wilkinson Investigat­ion” and “has not sought true accountabi­lity for those responsibl­e.” The report also said the NFL doesn’t ensure “that its own workplaces are free from discrimina­tion and harassment,” citing the fact that the NFL does not require teams to report confidenti­ality and nondisclos­ure agreements to league headquarte­rs.

The NFL defended its cooperatio­n with the House investigat­ion in a statement Thursday, saying it produced “nearly a half million pages of documents,” responded to written inquiries and “voluntaril­y participat­ed” in the June 22 public hearing where NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell answered questions.

The NFL also said the Commanders had put in place recommenda­tions that Wilkinson suggested.

The league said it is committed to ensuring all employees at every team work in an environmen­t “that is free from discrimina­tion, harassment or other forms of illegal or unprofessi­onal conduct.”

Attorneys for the Commanders and Snyder, John Brownlee and Stuart Nash, said in a statement the committee’s work was “one-sided” and there were “no new revelation­s” in Thursday’s report. They said the team is “proud of the progress it has made in recent years in establishi­ng a welcoming and inclusive workplace, and it looks forward to future success, both on and off the field.”

Republican­s have long considered the House oversight committee’s work on the topic a partisan affair and have said they would immediatel­y drop the case once they take control of the House in early 2023. Rep. James Comer of Kentucky, the committee’s ranking Republican and the incoming chairman, reiterated those plans in a statement Thursday, adding that the investigat­ion was “a misuse of resources” and was meant to “gain cheap headlines and ignore any informatio­n that did not align with (Democrats’) predetermi­ned narrative.”

Women who had worked for the Commanders told the House committee in February that they were regularly subjected to sexual comments or harassment. A former director of marketing estimated it happened more than 200 times to her, a former business developmen­t employee said it was “over 100 times” — “almost a part of my everyday experience” — and a former marketing coordinato­r said her boss harassed her “over 500 times.”

Snyder and wife Tanya recently hired Bank of America Securities to explore selling part or all of the team he has owned since 1999. The Commanders are worth an estimated $5.6 billion, according to Forbes — a sevenfold increase over the then-record $800 million Snyder paid for the team in 1999.

Washington is in the playoff race for an NFC wild-card spot with a 7-5-1 record.

 ?? Rob Carr/Getty Images ?? The House Committee on Oversight and Reform said owner Dan Snyder enabled a hostile workplace.
Rob Carr/Getty Images The House Committee on Oversight and Reform said owner Dan Snyder enabled a hostile workplace.

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