Los Angeles Times

Charlie Rose scandal grows

Report says fired CBS News anchor’s alleged sex misconduct was widespread, occurred over decades.

- By Stephen Battaglio stephen.battaglio@latimes.com Twitter: @SteveBatta­glio

Fired CBS News anchor Charlie Rose’s sexual misconduct was widespread and occurred over decades, according to an investigat­ion published Thursday in the Washington Post.

The report alleges that three CBS News executives were made aware of Rose’s conduct.

But CBS News said its human resources department never received a harassment complaint about Rose until after his terminatio­n in November.

Rose, 76, was fired from “CBS This Morning” and “60 Minutes,” after eight women who worked at his PBS talk show told the Post he had groped them, exposed himself or spoke to them inappropri­ately. PBS also canceled the nightly talk show “Charlie Rose.”

The new Post report has 27 women, including 14 who worked at CBS News, alleging they were harassed by Rose. Rose is accused in one incident of exposing his penis and touching the breasts of a co-worker at the Washington bureau of NBC News where they worked in 1976.

Rose’s email response to the new allegation­s raised by the Post said: “Your story is unfair and inaccurate.”

CBS News said in a statement that it “could not corroborat­e or confirm” the accounts in the Post story, one of which dates from 1986. The news division said in a statement that since Rose’s departure it has stepped up efforts to deal with inappropri­ate workplace behavior and has hired employment lawyers from the firm Proskauer Rose to advise the company.

“Since we terminated Charlie Rose, we’ve worked to strengthen existing systems to ensure a safe environmen­t where everyone can do their best work,” the statement read. “Some of the actions we have taken have been reported publicly, some have not. We offer employees discretion and fairness, and we take swift action when we learn of unacceptab­le behavior. That said, we cannot corroborat­e or confirm many of the situations described. We continue to look for ways to improve our workplace. We are not done with this process.”

The incidents alleged to have happened at CBS range from 1986, when Rose was an anchor on the overnight program “Nightwatch,” to 2017 at “60 Minutes.”

Most of the accounts are from unnamed sources who said they feared retributio­n for speaking out. The Post said it corroborat­ed specific accounts with witnesses or people in whom they confided.

The story quotes Sophie Gayter, a former “60 Minutes” employee, who said Rose grabbed her buttocks as she walked down the hallway of the newsmagazi­ne’s office in 2013.

Some women told the newspaper they feared going to executives about the incidents. The Post quoted Gayter as saying that “people did what they wanted to you.”

The story describes incidents that were brought to the attention of two executive producers who supervised Rose.

A “CBS This Morning” employee who said she was forcibly kissed by Rose at a party in late 2011 told Chris Licht, then the executive producer of the program, about the incident shortly after it occurred, the Post reported. But Licht was asked by the woman not to bring the issue up to human resources. Licht told the Post he respected the woman’s wishes but that he did address the matter with Rose.

 ?? Roy Rochlin Getty Images ?? CHARLIE ROSE was fired after eight women who worked at his PBS show accused him of misconduct.
Roy Rochlin Getty Images CHARLIE ROSE was fired after eight women who worked at his PBS show accused him of misconduct.

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