The Oklahoman

Activision confirms SEC probe into discrimina­tion allegation

Company’s shares dip 20% as legal woes build

- Tali Arbel

Activision Blizzard, one of the world’s most high-profile video game companies, has confirmed a regulatory probe and said it is working to address workplace discrimina­tion complaints.

The Santa Monica, California, company said Tuesday that it is complying with a recent Securities and Exchange Commission subpoena sent to current and former employees and executives and the company itself on “employment matters and related issues.”

The Wall Street Journal had reported Monday that the SEC was investigat­ing how the company had treated complaints of sexual misconduct and workplace discrimina­tion and had subpoenaed senior executives including CEO Bobby Kotick, a well-known tech billionair­e who is Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg’s ex-boyfriend. An SEC spokesman declined to comment.

Activision Blizzard also said Tuesday it has cooperated with an Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission investigat­ion into employment practices and that it is working with multiple regulators “on addressing and resolving workplace complaints it has received” and that it is committed to making the company “one of the best, most inclusive places to work.” It has hired a new “Chief People Officer” from Disney.

The company’s shares have dropped 20% in two months as legal woes build over an alleged culture of discrimina­tion against women and minorities at the maker of Candy Crush, Call of Duty, Overwatch and World of Warcraft.

The Wall Street Journal had reported the SEC was investigat­ing how the company treated complaints of sexual misconduct and workplace discrimina­tion.

In late July, California’s civil rights agency sued the company, alleging gender discrimina­tion and sexual harassment. Employees staged a walkout to protest what they said was Activision’s culture of sexism and discrimina­tion.

A shareholde­r lawsuit in August said the company failed to disclose to investors that it was being investigat­ed in California and that it had workplace culture issues that could result in legal problems. The shareholde­r suit noted unhappines­s within the company, saying more than 2,000 current and former Activision employees signed a petition criticizin­g the company’s response to the California suit as “insulting” and saying they did not trust leadership to “place employee safety above their own interests.”

 ?? JAE C. HONG/AP FILE ?? Activision Blizzard’s shares have dropped 20% in two months as legal woes build over an alleged culture of discrimina­tion against women and minorities at the maker of Candy Crush, Call of Duty, Overwatch and World of Warcraft.
JAE C. HONG/AP FILE Activision Blizzard’s shares have dropped 20% in two months as legal woes build over an alleged culture of discrimina­tion against women and minorities at the maker of Candy Crush, Call of Duty, Overwatch and World of Warcraft.

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