Gretchen Carlson files sexual harassment
Gretchen Carlson, a Fox News host, said Wednesday she was fired by
the conservative-leaning cable news network and has filed a sexual
harassment lawsuit against its chairman and CEO, Roger Ailes.
In
a statement released through a public relations firm, Carlson, best
known for co-hosting “Fox & Friends” until 2013, said she “refused
to sleep” with Ailes and “reported disparaging treatment in the
newsroom.”
Carlson was terminated on June 23 when her contract
expired. Her program, “The Real Story with Gretchen Carlson,” was the
leading cable news show in its afternoon time slot, she claimed.
“Ailes
has unlawfully retaliated against Carlson and sabotaged her career
because she refused his sexual advances and complained about severe and
pervasive sexual harassment," the complaint read.
“When Carlson met with Ailes to discuss the discriminatory treatment to
which she was being subjected, Ailes stated: ‘I think you and I should
have had a sexual relationship a long time ago and then you’d be good
and better and I’d be good and better,’ adding that ‘sometimes problems
are easier to solve’ that way.”
Fox News couldn’t be reached for
comment. Carlson couldn't be reached for comment. The clerk's office of
the Superior court of New Jersey in Bergen County confirmed the lawsuit was filed Wednesday.
Carlson, a former Miss America and a graduate of Stanford University,
worked for CBS News as a correspondent before joining Fox in 2005.
According
to the complaint, Carlson complained to her supervisor
in September 2009 that Steve Doocy, one of her co-hosts on "Fox &
Friends," had allegedly created "a hostile work environment by regularly
treating her in a sexist and condescending way, including by putting
his hand on her and pulling down her arm to shush her during a live
broadcast."
After learning of Carlson's complaints, Ailes
allegedly responded by calling her a "man-hater" and "killer," according
to the complaint. She claims she was given fewer coveted assignments
and interviews and was removed from her once-a-week appearances on "The
O'Reilly Factor." Her removal from "Fox & Friends" in 2013 was also a
punitive move by Ailes, she claimed.
Alleging Ailes hurt her
career advancement, Carlson is seeking compensatory damages, damages for
mental anguish, punitive damages, attorneys' fees and "reimbursement
for negative tax consequences resulting from a jury verdict" on this
case.
Carlson is represented by Nancy Erika Smith of Smith Mullin, along with Martin Hyman of Golenbock Eiseman.
This isn’t the first time Ailes has been accused of sexual harassment. According to The Loudest Voice in the Room, a biography of Ailes written by New York MagazineNational
Affairs Editor Gabriel Sherman, Ailes was negotiating a salary with
Randi Harrison, a TV producer, in the 1980s, when he offered her an
additional $100 each week “if you agree to have sex with me whenever I
want.”
Fox has said that the charges in Sherman's book are false.

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