Los Angeles Times

Two black workers sue Fox News in bias case

The employees file a racial discrimina­tion lawsuit saying former controller mocked African Americans.

- By Stephen Battaglio stephen.battaglio @latimes.com

Two black employees of Fox News have filed a racial discrimina­tion suit against the company and the recently fired executive they worked under.

The suit, filed Tuesday in New York State Supreme Court, is the latest legal action to hit the 21st Century Fox unit, which has either settled or litigated a number of sexual harassment cases lodged against its executives, including ousted chief Roger Ailes.

The latest complaint is aimed at Judy Slater, the controller for the accounting department at Fox News for 18 years, who was fired Feb. 28 amid allegation­s that she regularly made racist and inappropri­ate comments to her black employees. Slater worked on the second floor of the Manhattan headquarte­rs where Ailes and other top Fox News executives also operated.

“While Fox executives were busy either participat­ing in or looking the other way at the barrage of sexist, demeaning conduct hurled at its female employees, these same executives allowed this repugnant racial discrimina­tion to go unchecked,” says the suit filed by Tabrese Wright, a payroll coordinato­r at Fox News, and Tichaona Brown, a payroll manager. They are asking for unspecifie­d punitive damages.

The suit alleges that Wright was demoted and Brown terminated in retaliatio­n for complainin­g about Slater’s behavior.

The company has disputed the allegation. A Fox News representa­tive said Wednesday that Wright was moved to a comparable position in another department at the same salary and that Brown remains on the company payroll.

According to the suit, Slater mocked black employees in her department for the way they spoke and often used unflatteri­ng stereotype­s about black people in office conversati­ons about politics, news events and popular culture.

Slater is accused of belittling black employees for mispronoun­cing words and of forcing the workers to practice saying the words correctly in front of white employees.

Slater claimed that the Black Lives Matter movement against police brutal- ity in inner cities is racist and asked what would happen if there were a parallel White Lives Matter movement, according to the suit. The suit says she also asked Brown why there needed to be a cable channel called Black Entertainm­ent Television.

The lawsuit alleges that when a video surfaced online showing NFL star Ray Rice striking his then-fiancee, Slater said, “Why are all black men women-beaters?” and also pointed to O.J. Simpson, Mike Tyson and Chris Brown.

Slater called the payroll department — which is largely made up of black employees — the “southern payroll department” and the “urban payroll department,” the suit says.

The suit says Slater asked Wright if all three of her children “were fathered by the same man.”

It also alleges that Slater made similar insensitiv­e remarks to members of other ethnic groups who worked in her department.

Fox News defended its handling of the situation, noting that it had fired Slater.

“We take complaints of this nature very seriously and took prompt and effective remedial action before Ms. Brown and Ms. Wright sued in court and even before Ms. Wright complained through her lawyer,” a Fox News representa­tive said. “There is no place for inappropri­ate verbal remarks like this at Fox News. We are disappoint­ed that this needless litigation has been filed.”

Brown and Wright are represente­d by Douglas H. Wigdor and Jeanne Christense­n of the New York employment litigation firm Wigdor.

Slater could not be immediatel­y reached for comment. A Fox News representa­tive said the company had no informatio­n on who is representi­ng her in the case.

The matter is coming to light at a time when Bill O’Reilly, Fox News’ biggest star, is under fire for an onair remark he made about Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Los Angeles), who is black.

During his analysis on “Fox & Friends” of a Waters speech criticizin­g President Trump, O’Reilly said, “I didn’t hear a word she said. I was looking at the James Brown wig.”

O’Reilly later apologized on his program about the gibe comparing the congresswo­man’s hair to the soul singer’s. He said that the comment was “dumb” and that he respects Waters for her “sincere beliefs.”

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