The Mercury News

Alphabet legal chief out after accusation­s

- By Barbara Ortutay

David Drummond, the legal chief of Google parent company Alphabet, is leaving at the end of the month, following accusation­s of inappropri­ate relationsh­ips with employees.

Alphabet did not give a reason for Drummond’s departure in a short regulatory filing Friday.

The company said in November that its board was investigat­ing sexual misconduct cases against executives. Claims against Drummond were included in the investigat­ions.

Thousands of Google employees walked out of work in 2018 to protest the company’s handling of sexual misconduct claims. The board investigat­ion followed lawsuits brought by shareholde­rs after reports of sexual harassment at Google received national attention.

Last August, a former Google employee, Jennifer Blakely, published a report of her relationsh­ip with Drummond. Drummond has acknowledg­ed a relationsh­ip with Blakely. But in a statement at the time, he said he “never started” a relationsh­ip with anyone else at Alphabet.

The company said Drummond is not getting an exit package as part of his departure. His compensati­on package for 2018 was worth $47 million, making him one of the company’s highest-paid employees, ac

cording to regulatory filings.

In a memo sent to employees, Drummond said that with founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin “now leaving their executive roles at Alphabet, the company is entering an exciting new phase, and I believe that it’s also the right time for me to make way for the next generation of leaders.”

He did not mention the misconduct allegation­s.

Drummond said Page and Brin asked for his help more than 20 years ago when what became Google and Alphabet was just an unincorpor­ated startup. Drummond joined Google full time in 2002 and was named chief legal officer in 2006.

Drummond’s departure comes as Alphabet, like other big tech companies, faces regulatory presures around the world. Last March, Europe’s antitrust regulators ordered it to pay 1.49 billion euros ($1.7 billion) for freezing out rivals in the online advertisin­g business. It also faces antitrust probes in the U.S. as lawmakers question its power and dominance.

 ?? MAHESH KUMAR A. — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? David Drummond, chief legal counsel for Google’s parent, was part of an investigat­ion last year into sexual misconduct allegation­s.
MAHESH KUMAR A. — ASSOCIATED PRESS David Drummond, chief legal counsel for Google’s parent, was part of an investigat­ion last year into sexual misconduct allegation­s.

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