The Mercury News

Fox News agrees to pay $12 million to settle suit

- By Katie Robertson

Fox News has agreed to pay $12 million to Abby Grossberg, a former Fox News producer who had accused the network of operating a hostile and discrimina­tory workplace and of coercing her into providing false testimony in a deposition.

Parisis G. Filippatos, a lawyer for Grossberg, said that the settlement concluded all of Grossberg's claims against Fox and the people she had named in her complaints, including former host Tucker Carlson and some of his producers.

Grossberg's legal team filed a request in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York on Friday to dismiss a remaining lawsuit against Fox in light of the settlement.

Grossberg said in a statement Friday that she stood by her allegation­s, but she was “heartened that Fox News has taken me and my legal claims seriously.”

“I am hopeful, based on our discussion­s with Fox News today, that this resolution represents a positive step by the network regarding its treatment of women and minorities in the workplace,” she said.

A spokespers­on for Fox said in a statement Friday: “We are pleased that we have been able to resolve this matter without further litigation.”

The settlement with Grossberg is the latest developmen­t in a series of legal battles involving Fox. In April, the company paid Dominion Voting Systems $787.5 million, in what is believed to be the biggest settlement figure in a defamation case. Days later, Fox took Carlson, its most popular host, off the air after the company's leadership concluded he was more of a problem than an asset and had to go.

Fox faces a second defamation case by another voting technology company. Smartmatic, like Dominion, says Fox knowingly spread false informatio­n about its products, baselessly claiming that they contribute­d to election fraud in 2020.

The accusation­s against Fox by Grossberg, 42, sprung partly from the Dominion

case. In March, she filed a lawsuit in Delaware, claiming that Fox coerced her into lying in sworn testimony she gave in the case. Grossberg amended her witness testimony before the Dominion trial, presenting another hurdle for Fox's legal team, which had been dealt a series of blows in pretrial rulings.

Grossberg also filed a separate lawsuit in New

York that accused Fox and Carlson of allowing a culture of rampant misogyny and sexual harassment. She said she had been subjected to sexist and antisemiti­c harassment during her time as the head of booking on “Tucker Carlson Tonight.”

Fox fired Grossberg four days after she filed the two lawsuits, saying in a statement at the time that she had disclosed privileged informatio­n about the Dominion case. She withdrew the Delaware suit in May, but her lawyer said at the time that they planned to refile in New York.

Grossberg joined Fox News in 2019 as a senior producer for host Maria Bartiromo. In August 2022, she moved to Carlson's team as the head of booking.

In her lawsuit, Grossberg said she found a workplace tainted by misogyny and harassment, where male producers were openly sexist to her and her co-workers, made crude jokes and had decorated the space with photos of Nancy Pelosi, then the House speaker, in a swimsuit showing cleavage.

Grossberg never met Carlson, who worked mostly from his homes in Florida and Maine, but she correspond­ed with him frequently over email, text and video calls. Carlson's staff in New York was led by Justin Wells, the senior executive producer. (Wells was fired by Fox in April.)

After filing her lawsuits, Grossberg drip-fed audio recordings from her time at Fox to other media organizati­ons. The recordings showed, among other things, Carlson's immense influence on the Republican Party; an admission by Rudy Giuliani, lawyer to former President Donald Trump, that he didn't have evidence of voter fraud; and discussion­s between Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and Bartiromo about his attempts to block President Joe Biden's election victory.

Filippatos confirmed that he had been contacted by the office of the special counsel investigat­ing Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election, and that he and his client were cooperatin­g. At least 90 tapes had been retrieved and Grossberg's legal team was forensical­ly analyzing all of Grossberg's devices in case there were any additional recordings, Filippatos said.

Grossberg said she would not comment further on her accusation­s against Fox or her time at the company, but would “continue to speak out on issues and causes that I believe in, including journalism, equality, dignity and respect in the workplace.”

 ?? DESIREE RIOS — THE NEW YORK TIMES, FILE ?? The former Fox News producer Abby Grossberg, who said in a lawsuit that she faced sexual harassment from Tucker Carlson's staff members, in New York, in April.
DESIREE RIOS — THE NEW YORK TIMES, FILE The former Fox News producer Abby Grossberg, who said in a lawsuit that she faced sexual harassment from Tucker Carlson's staff members, in New York, in April.

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