CBS board denies Leslie Moonves $120 million severance following sexual assault allegations

The CBS board of directors has denied former chairman-CEO Leslie Moonves any of the $120 million severance he was due under his employment contract after conducting a five-month internal probe of his conduct and the corporate culture at CBS Corp.

“We have determined that there are grounds to terminate for cause, including his willful and material misfeasance, violation of Company policies and breach of his employment contract, as well as his willful failure to cooperate fully with the Company’s investigation. Mr. Moonves will not receive any severance payment from the Company,” the board said in a statement Monday.

CBS’ longtime leader was forced out Sept. 9 amid a cascade of sexual assault and misconduct allegations. The probe reportedly found damning allegations of Moonves abusing his power as CEO and engaging in shocking instances of sexual misconduct with employees at CBS. The move sets the stage for a long legal battle, starting in arbitration, between CBS and Moonves. Moonves has denied many of the allegations against him and maintained that his sexual encounters were consensual.

The board’s determination that Moonves was fired for cause amid numerous violations of CBS policy for employees comes after the CBS board of directors has been overhauled following his ouster. Six new members joined the 11-member panel and five longtime directors were forced out by controlling shareholder Shari Redstone, whose National Amusements Inc. controls nearly 80% of the voting power in CBS and its corporate sibling Viacom.

The internal probe was conducted by the law firms of Covington & Burling and Debevoise & Plimpton. Details of the probe’s findings leaked earlier this month to the New York Times. The preliminary draft, according to the Times, included a host of damning allegations of Moonves engaging in sex acts in his CBS offices with employees.

The sexual misconduct storm around Moonves came up as the then-revered CBS boss engaged in a bold legal battle with Shari Redstone for control of the company that her father, Viacom mogul Sumner Redstone, acquired in 2000. Moonves was previously celebrated for his stewardship of CBS as a programmer and as a business strategist in bucking some of the digital turbulence that traditional media companies have faced. His objection to Shari Redstone’s push for CBS and Viacom to reunite at a time of major consolidation in media was the spark for the lawsuit against Redstone’s National Amusement holding company.

Now Moonves’ legacy has been all but destroyed by the drumbeat of sexual assault allegations. The lawsuit, which was a longshot at best, was settled as part of Moonves’ exit agreement set the day the New Yorker published the second of two damning stories on Moonves’ long history in Hollywood.

Moonves is said to be resolute in pursuing the severance through arbitration in order to seek a measure of vindication. Inside CBS is there is deep resentment toward Moonves for deeply tarnishing the network’s legacy as America’s most-watched network with allegations of egregious sexual misconduct too numerous to ignore.

As such, the denial of severance and finding that he was fired for cause marks the latest step in the extraordinary downfall of one of the most powerful figures in the entertainment industry during the past 25 years. Moonves’ hasty departure from CBS Corp. has jolted the company, spurring a management overhaul under acting CEO Joe Ianniello amid expectations that merger discussions will begin once again for CBS Corp. and Viacom after the new year.

Internally, CBS is roiling from the Times’ continued revelations from the report about settlements and disturbing allegations about the behavior of some insiders. Last week, the Times reported that CBS paid nearly $10 million in a settlement to actor Eliza Dushku after she raised complaints about alleged verbal harassment from Michael Weatherly, star of the CBS drama “Bull.”

The investigation began in August in the wake of allegations of assault and misconduct made against Moonves in Farrow’s New Yorker exposes. Moonves has maintained all sexual encounters were consensual and denied other allegations including being violent with women.

In response the CBS board hired two top-flight legal firms although the choice of Covington and Debevoise was criticized as both firms have done corporate work for CBS in recent years, raising the question of whether they would go easy on the company to protect future business. An investigation into the culture of CBS News, which had started earlier in the year of #MeToo after former “CBS This Morning” co-anchor Charlie Rose left in the wake of harassment allegations, was rolled up into the larger probe.

Moonves is facing allegations that he was evasive and at times misleading investigators during the probe. He was reported by the Times to have turned over his son’s iPad instead of his own. The allegations against Moonves included the assertion that he kept a woman on the payroll for the purpose of providing oral sex on call, according to the Times.

Moreover, a picture of desperation around Moonves was painted by another report in the Times last month. In the months before the first damning New Yorker expose hit in July, Moonves according to the Times courted a down-and-out talent manager Marv Dauer for the purpose of keeping him and his actor client Bobbie Phillips quiet about a March 1995 incident during a meeting at Moonves’ office at Warner Bros. Television. He reportedly pushed CBS executives to offer Phillips a role on a network series to persuade her from talking about the decades-old encounter in which she alleges he exposed himself, grabbed her by the neck and forced his erect penis into her mouth. Moonves told the Times that he “strongly believe(s)” the encounter was consensual.

More to come

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