Weinstein Company
Weinstein Company
Weinstein Company
THEPEOPLEOFTHESTATEOF
NEW YORK, by ERIC T.
v.
Respondents.
The People of the State of New York, by their attorney, ERIC T. SCHNEIDERMAN, Attorney
General of the State of New York, respectfully allege, upon information and belief:
INTRODUCTION
1. The Attorney General, on behalf of the People of the State of New York, brings
this action to remedy a years-long gender-based hostile work environment, a pattern of quid pro
quo sexual harassment, and routine misuse of corporate resources for unlawful ends that
extended from in or about 2005 through at least in or about October 2017. The Attorney General
seeks to hold accountable Harvey Weinstein ("HW"), his brother Robert Weinstein ("RW"), and
the company for which they served as co-owners, co-Chairmen of the Board, and co-Chief
Executive Officers ("co-CEOs"), The Weinstein Company LLC and its parent holding company,
"TWC" Company"
The Weinstein Company Holdings LLC (collectively, or "The Company"), for repeated,
persistent, and egregious violations of law, to vindicate the rights of TWC's employees, and to
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 1 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
2. TWC is a company headquartered in New York, New York, that produces and
distributes films and television shows. At times relevant to this Petition, TWC employed
upwards of 250 people in its New York office and satellite offices in Los Angeles, California,
and London, England. TWC was at all times required to comply with New York State and New
York City laws prohibiting sexual harassment and discrimination on the basis of gender. HW
and RW, as the company's owners and co-CEOs, were bound to abide by these laws and ensure
that they were enforced at TWC. In addition, HW was prohibited from engaging in unlawful sex
offenses, such as sexual misconduct, forcible touching, and coercion, and attempts to commit the
same, in violation of various provisions of the New York Penal Law, and from using TWC
employees, resources, and business opportunities to facilitate repeated and persistent illegality of
reports that HW used his role as TWC's co-CEO and his power within the entertainment industry
to sexually harass employees and abuse women. HW and TWC sought to shield these and
additional facts from disclosure through routine use of Non-Disclosure Agreements ("NDAs")
prohibiting individuals from speaking about their experiences at TWC. The Attorney General has
used investigative authorities granted to the Office of the Attorney General ("OAG") under
Section 63(12), including the OAG's investigative subpoena power, to begin uncovering these
facts. While the OAG's investigation is ongoing, it has obtained documents and interviewed
witnesses confirming that Respondents repeatedly and persistently violated the law.
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 2 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
that pervaded the workplace and by demanding that women engage in sexual
contact.
ii. Second, HW repeatedly and persistently used his position at TWC, female
serve his interests in sexual contact, some of which upon information and
these unlawful acts in his capacity as TWC's co-owner and co-CEO, making him the most senior
person in the company. In that role, HW used TWC's corporate resources and employees to
facilitate the unlawful conduct. Thus, as a matter of law, HW's unlawful activities are
attributable to TWC.
6. In addition, TWC and RW are liable because they were aware of and acquiesced
in repeated and persistent unlawful conduct by failing to investigate or stop it. As described
"Board"
herein, RW, TWC's management, and TWC's Board of Directors (the "Board") were repeatedly
presented with credible evidence of HW's sexual harassment of TWC employees and interns,
and his use of corporate employees and resources to facilitate sexual activity with third parties,
7. RW and TWC's Board failed to: further investigate to discover the nature and
extent of the misconduct; absolutely prohibit such misconduct; restrict HW's ability to hire or
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 3 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
supervise employees and his use of corporate resources in order to avoid future recurrence of
8. Instead of investigating and taking prompt corrective action, TWC and RW used
settlements that contained strict NDAs to keep law enforcement, the public, and even other TWC
employees from discovering the extensive allegations of misconduct against HW. TWC itself
entered into several of these NDA-containing settlements with company employees. Many
witnesses to HW's unlawful conduct separately were subject to broad NDAs pursuant to their
TWC employment agreements, preventing them from revealing their own observations of
misconduct to law enforcement as well. In this way, TWC and RW enabled HW's unlawful
conduct to continue far beyond the date when, through reasonable diligence, it should have been
stopped.
PARTIES
9. Petitioner is the People of the State of New York, by its attorney, Eric T.
10. Respondents The Weinstein Company LLC and its parent company The
"TWC" "Company"
Weinstein Company Holdings, LLC (collectively, or the "Company") are companies
that were founded in or about 2005, with their principal offices and places of business at 99
Hudson Street, New York, New York, 10013, from which they have transacted business at all
times mentioned herein. TWC also maintains office space at 375 Greenwich Street, New York,
New York, and satellite offices in Los Angeles, California and London, England.
11. Respondent HW is the co-founder, and was the co-Chairman and co-CEO of
TWC from its inception in or about 2005 until his termination in October 2017. HW was
terminated from the TWC Board and as co-CEO in October 2017. HW currently owns
approximately 21% of the voting shares of TWC. As co-Chairman and co-CEO, HW also drew a
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 4 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
salary from TWC and had expenses covered by TWC. HW regularly transacted TWC business at
TWC's headquarters in New York, New York, primarily using office space at TWC's 375
12. Respondent RW is the co-founder and was co-Chairman and co-CEO of TWC
with HW until HW's termination. RW remains on the TWC Board and owns approximately 21%
of the voting shares of TWC. RW regularly transacted TWC business at TWC's headquarters in
13. The Attorney General brings this action on behalf of the People of the State of
14. Under the Executive Law, the Attorney General is authorized to bring a special
proceeding in this Court seeking injunctive relief, restitution, damages, disgorgement, civil
penalties where applicable, and costs on behalf of the People of the State of New York
"[w]henever any person shall engage in repeated fraudulent or illegal acts or otherwise
business."
N.Y. Exec. Law § 63(12).
15. Venue is properly laid in New York County because Respondent TWC has its
principal office within the county, and many of the events and omissions giving rise to the claims
16. This Court may exercise personal jurisdiction over Respondents HW and RW
because they conducted the business of TWC in New York, New York, and because they
participated in events and omissions giving rise to the violations while in New York County.
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 5 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
17. The Court may exercise personal jurisdiction over Respondent TWC because it is
a company with its principal office and place of business in New York County.
18. On October 23, 2017, the OAG issued a subpoena to TWC pursuant to Executive
Law 63(12), for documents and testimony. The subpoena was issued as part of the OAG's
investigation into reports that HW engaged in sexual harassment and sexual misconduct in the
workplace, including at TWC's headquarters in New York; that TWC employees were enlisted
to further and conceal the sexual harassment; and that all of this misconduct was hidden from
law enforcement authorities and the public through aggressive use of NDAs and other efforts to
19. The OAG has reviewed documentary evidence produced by Respondents and
obtained from other sources, including correspondence, business records, financial records, and
receive documents responsive to its subpoenas and to review those documents. The OAG also
has interviewed current and former employees, executives, and Board members of TWC, and it
20. The OAG's ongoing investigation has so far confirmed that Respondents have
engaged in multiple, repeated, and persistent violations of law that have harmed TWC
employees, as well as individuals seeking business opportunities with TWC. These violations
include unlawful gender discrimination and sexual harassment in violation of New York
Executive Law § 296 et seq., New York Civil Rights Law § 40-c, New York City Human Rights
Law, New York City Administrative Code § 8-107(1)(a), and violations of provisions of the New
York Penal Law prohibiting forcible touching (Penal Law § 130.52), sexual abuse (Penal Law
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 6 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
§ 130.55), and coercion (Penal Law § 135.60), and attempts to commit the same, and upon
21. Even while its investigation continues, the OAG has instituted this proceeding at
the present time in light of its factual and legal findings, and the possible imminent sale of TWC
Respondents'
and/or its assets to purchasers in a transaction that could leave survivors of
obtain unwarranted financial benefits, and fail to protect adequately TWC employees who would
be reporting to some of the same managers (including TWC's Chief Operating Officer ("COO"))
who failed to investigate HW's ongoing misconduct or adequately protect female employees
FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
22. From the creation of TWC in 2005 through his forced exit from the company in
October 2017, HW held extensive power and influence in the film and television industry. HW's
support could open doors and launch award-winning careers, while his disapproval could
permanently tarnish reputations and essentially blacklist a person across the industry.
23. As described herein, HW repeatedly and persistently misused his power within
TWC and in the film and television industry, and the employees and resources of TWC, to harm
and exploit both TWC workers and third parties seeking to do business with TWC. Within TWC,
quid pro quo sexual harassment; subjected female TWC employees and women seeking business
or job opportunities with TWC to unwelcome and inappropriate physical contact and touching;
subjected employees to a persistent stream of threats and verbal abuse, much of which was
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 7 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
sexual or gendered in nature; and menaced female employees with threats to their careers and of
physical harm.
25. HW also required multiple groups of TWC employees to facilitate his sexual
encounters with women. In part, HW required executive assistants to schedule and help arrange
sexual (or possible sexual) encounters for HW, even directing them to essentially badger women
"meeting"
who refused or expressed reluctance into accepting a with HW. Additionally, on
multiple occasions, HW required junior executives to meet a woman and discuss working in the
entertainment industry generally or on specific TWC projects, because he was interested in her
sexually and wanted the executives to help put the woman at ease before he made any sexual
26. Through such conduct and other behavior detailed below, HW created what one
women"
former employee described as a "toxic environment for at TWC that persisted from the
early days of TWC in 2005 to at least HW's termination as TWC co-CEO in 2017.
27. HW's and TWC's unlawful activity persisted, at least in part, due to the effective
acquiescence of RW and certain other members of TWC's management and Board. As explained
in Sections C and D below, members of TWC's management and Board were aware of or had
access to numerous complaints of HW's misconduct as well as, to TWC employees and records
which could have confirmed the accuracy of the complaints and the scope of misconduct-yet
the company failed to adequately investigate any of the claims, take common-sense measures to
protect female employees and third parties from HW's illegal conduct, or terminate HW's
employment. Furthermore, TWC lacked an effective process for reporting and investigating
complaints of sexual harassment or other sexual misconduct, as is required by law: it did not
train employees on sexual harassment policies or laws; it did not have a meaningful or consistent
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 8 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
process for documenting and preserving claims of sexual harassment or other misconduct; and,
when individuals did complain, Human Resources was not empowered to address claims related
to HW.
28. TWC's corporate governance was made aware of but chose not to end the abuse
being facilitated through its company. TWC's Board had power to supervise HW, to limit his
contact with female employees and third parties, and to take concrete steps to stop it. The Board
also had the power to refuse to renew HW's employment contract in 2015, but failed to act, in
part out of HW's power and influence on the Board and in part due to concern that HW's
departure or a public battle over his contract would inflict financial harm on TWC. HW and
Board members loyal to HW defeated any efforts by independent Board members to investigate
29. To work for Weinstein was to work under a persistent barrage of gender-
Harvey
workplace generally hostile to women. This conduct occurred throughout the relevant time
period.
30. For instance, HW regularly berated women using gender-based obscenities and
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 9 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
"cunt" "pussy"
31. HW regularly called female employees or when he was angry with
them or felt they had done a task poorly or incorrectly, or even just instead of calling them by
32. When HW wanted to particularly degrade or scold men, he called them cunt or
pussy as well, and otherwise denigrated them in sexualized terms. For example, at a meeting
attended by several TWC executives, HW criticized a male executive in the room for his alleged
weakness. During the course of the criticism, HW turned to another TWC employee and said,
pussy?"
"Can you smell [his]
33. On another occasion, HW told a male assistant he was fired for-as reflected in
an email sent by the assistant to the head of Human Resources about the incident-being "just a
boy."
fucking faggot boy, a stupid fucking faggot HW routinely used similar epithets attacking
employees'
masculinity.
34. HW regularly used gender stereotypes to insult and belittle female employees.
For example, in a fit of rage against one female employee, he yelled that she should leave the
company and make babies since that was all she was good for. He belittled other female
35. On other occasions, he asked female employees if they had their period, including
far."
asking an employee if her tampon was "up too He also accused female employees of
37. Despite knowledge of HW's use of sexualized obscenities and gendered insults,
TWC executives with responsibility for the matter and the Board failed to take any meaningful
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 10 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
steps to investigate allegations of such conduct or take remedial action to protect TWC
Intimidation
38. HW, who stands over six feet tall, used his stature and threatening statements on
numerous occasions to demean and frighten female employees. Multiple female employees have
described HW's regular use of physical intimidation and threats to terrorize female employees
generally, deter them from making formal or informal workplace complaints, and prevent them
cursing in their faces, threatening to end their careers, and describing his intent to harm them, all
while walking into them until his face was only inches from theirs.
40. TWC's management was presented with several allegations of such misconduct.
According to information contained within HW's personnel file, on one occasion in 2011, HW
violently punched the back of a female employee's car seat while berating her. On a separate
occasion, he backed the same employee up against a wall, standing intimidatingly close while
berating her. This as well as other misconduct prompted the female employee to file a formal
complaint with TWC. TWC resolved the complaint via an agreement that contained an NDA.
TWC did not adequately investigate the complaint, act to protect employees, or prevent HW
Resources, HW launched into a tirade against a female employee before a media interview in
which he berated her viciously and at length in front of other TWC employees and threatened to
loins," out"
"cut [her] traumatizing the employee, making her feel "forced of her job, and
11
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 11 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
stress."
causing her "severe TWC resolved the complaint via an agreement that contained an
NDA. TWC did not adequately investigate the complaint, act to protect employees, or prevent
42. HW cornered another female employee in a hotel lobby in 2014, coming so close
to her and screaming at her so loudly about being a failure that a patron and hotel staff member
came to ask if she needed assistance after HW left. The female employee was traumatized by the
interaction and felt physically unsafe around HW after its conclusion, as reflected in a formal
complaint to Human Resources in 2015 that described this incident and other misconduct. TWC
resolved the complaint via an agreement that contained an NDA. TWC did not adequately
conduct.
43. HW told several employees throughout the relevant time period that, in substance,
effect. HW touted his connection to powerful political figures and asserted that he had contacts
within the Secret Service that could take care of problems. Female employees knew from
observations of HW and from the experiences of other TWC employees that he was capable of
fits of rage, including infliction of physical injury, and that he was sexually aggressive. Thus,
they became fearful that they could suffer physical injury or worse if they did not satisfy his
demands. With respect to all of these matters, TWC did not adequately investigate repeated
roles that required them to facilitate and support his sexual activity with third parties or support
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 12 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
"domestic"
activities. TWC employed one group of female employees whose primary job it was
to accompany HW to events and to facilitate HW's sexual conquests. These women were kept on
TWC's payroll in TWC's New York, Los Angeles, and London offices. While they had different
titles, as a practical matter their primary responsibility included taking HW to parties at which he
could meet young women, and introducing him to young women seeking opportunities at TWC
with whom he could attempt to engage in sexual relations. These women were described by
"roster" women."
some witnesses as members of HW's TWC or his "wing One of the members
of this entourage was flown from London to New York to teach HW's assistants how to dress
assistants were compelled to take various steps to further HW's regular sexual activity, including
Harvey"
by contacting "Friends of ("FOH") and other prospective sexual partners via text
message or phone at his direction and maintaining space on his calendar for sexual activity. Two
TWC employee witnesses described having to procure HW's erectile dysfunction shots, one of
whom received a TWC bonus for obtaining them and was at times directed by HW to administer
the injections. Another TWC witness described how she had to ensure HW had an adequate
bag"
supply of them in his travel bag-referred to within the company as his "go at all times.
One TWC employee was tasked with preparing a room in TWC's offices for HW's sexual
activity when he wished to have sexual encounters in the office, and with cleaning up when it
was over. Articles of women's clothing were left behind on occasion after these incidents,
making clear what transpired during these encounters and requiring TWC employees to make
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 13 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
46. The common occurrence of sexual activity in the workplace by TWC's co-CEO,
sometimes while or immediately after employees were working in office space adjacent to the
room where the activity occurred, contributed to the hostile work environment.
they did not serve in gendered roles such as providing childcare to his young children, obtaining
prescriptions for medicine, and performing other domestic labor such as assisting HW's wife or
one of HW's adult daughters. One employee formally complained of this conduct to Human
Resources in 2015, noting that she did "not appreciate being given work that my male
complete."
counterparts are never asked to Human Resources replied to this complaint as
this...."
follows: "Please keep me updated on The employee received no follow-up
communications from TWC executives and no remedial actions was taken as a result of the
48. That same employee followed up the next month with an email entitled "Well,
updated...." ."
you asked me to keep you updated . . . in which the employee stated that rather than obtaining
a promotion to executive, she was threatened with termination if she did not start taking care of
boys"
personal tasks for HW such as dealing with HW's doctors-work that "the at TWC were
never asked to perform. When the employee refused to assume this domestic role, HW stated,
according to the second written complaint to Human Resources, "if that's your attitude fuck you
out."
and get The employee received no response from TWC executives and no remedial action
was taken as a result of the complaint, reflecting TWC conducted no investigation of this
complaint either. The employee left the company, having been retaliated against for refusing to
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 14 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
employees'
executives-also were forced to facilitate HW's sexual conquests. These female job
responsibilities should have been confined to using their expertise to help TWC produce films
and television projects. Yet despite their skills and stated job responsibilities, HW required them
to meet with prospective sexual conquests in order to facilitate HW's sexual activity, and to
follow through on HW's promise of employment opportunities to women who met with HW's
favor. This compelled service demeaned and humiliated the female executives, contributing to
50. The practice of sending female TWC executives to meetings with HW's
prospective sexual conquests was overt within the company. HW's assistants were aware that
HW would want a female executive to be present at the outset of any such meeting with a
prospective sexual conquest, and were trained to ask HW which executives HW would want to
51. One female executive described her dismay at being compelled to take meetings
clearly not for business purposes but for the purpose of facilitating HW's sex life. Male creative
executives were not forced to take these kinds of meetings. As the executive reported to TWC's
Human Resources department: "only female executives are put in these positions with actresses
friendship,'
with whom HW has a 'personal which to my understanding means he has either had
or wants to have sexual relations with them. Female TWC employees are essentially used to
work."
facilitate his sexual conquests of vulnerable women who hope he will get them TWC
took no steps to investigate these allegations or to prevent future recurrence of such conduct.
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 15 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
52. HW made quid pro quo offers or demands of sexual favors in exchange for career
advancement at TWC, or to avoid adverse employment consequences at TWC. HW's overt quid
pro quo sexual harassment further contributed to the hostile work environment within TWC.
53. The quid pro quo harassment took several forms, including demands for sex or
intimate physical contact in exchange for career advancement, or qualifying career opportunities
in one instance in late 2014, HW approached a young female TWC intern, and told her to write
her name and phone number on a slip of paper. The intern, who had not had interactions with
HW before, was surprised and complied. HW asked her to join him for dinner that night but she
declined, citing pre-existing plans. He told her to cancel them and that he would call her that
night. When HW called, the employee again refused to meet him, and he ultimately proposed a
meeting at 7:30a.m. at the Peninsula Hotel where he was staying. When she arrived at the hotel,
HW made clear that he wanted a sexual relationship and proceeded to name famous actresses
whose careers he purportedly had advanced after they agreed to his proposition. HW proposed a
similar quid pro quo relationship to the intern. The intern spent an hour repeatedly saying no to
his entreaties and refusing to come up to HW's hotel room. After the incident, the intern left the
company. The complaint was reported to Human Resources and to company executives, but
TWC took no institutional action to protect interns from HW or prevent future recurrence of such
conduct.
hotel room at the end of the day to set up his phone and devices for the next day or some other
service,"
alleged work reason (work that TWC employees referred to as "turndown and that was
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 16 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
generally assigned to female TWC employees). Upon her arrival at his hotel room, HW appeared
naked under a bathrobe and asked her for a massage. When the employee said no, HW cajoled,
badgered, and insisted until she relented and, against her wishes, submitted to massaging him out
of fear of employment-based retaliation by HW. The incident was reported to Human Resources
and to TWC executives and Board members in November 2015, but TWC took no action to
formally investigate the complaint, to protect employees from HW, or to prevent future
56. On other occasions in 2014 and 2015, HW exposed himself to a female employee
and made her take dictation from him while he leered at her, naked on his bed. That same
employee described how HW would insist that she sit next to him in the back seat of his
chauffeured vehicle and would place his hand on her upper thigh and buttocks near her genitalia
and rub her body without her consent. When she attempted to place bags or other barriers
between them to make it harder for him to reach her, he moved the barriers or repositioned
himself so that the unwelcome sexual contact could continue. This employee, and other TWC
employees, believed that they would face adverse employment consequences unless they
57. On one occasion, HW asserted that he might have to fire a female employee
because his daughter (for whom the employee was providing assistance at HW's direction) was
do"
angry with her, and he asked the employee what she was "prepared to to keep her job-a
proposition that the female employee understood as a demand for quid pro quo sexual activity.
The employee quit rather than submit to the demand for sex in exchange for continued
employment.
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 17 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
58. Another TWC employee did succumb to HW's demands for sex. The former
employee informed the OAG that the sexual activity was forced and unwelcome, and was
59. To avoid unwanted touching, leering, or remarks by HW, some female TWC
employees took to wearing pants instead of skirts or dresses, or wearing clothes that provided
cute?,"
60. To this HW made comments such as, "why don't you dress "you walk like
man," pretty,"
a or "you can be making clear that physical attractiveness and femininity were
necessary in order for the employee to be successful at TWC. As reported to Human Resources,
company executives, and the Board in 2015, and as was known more generally within TWC,
HW rewarded some female TWC employees with opportunities for career advancement
(including access to meetings and other business opportunities) based on how attractive they
appeared to him on that day, as he himself told the women. TWC did not take adequate steps to
"roster"
the from TWC's London office to teach his female assistants in the New York City
"happy."
office on how to make him Her tips included wearing skirts or dresses, looking
"good,"
feminine, showing more leg or a shoulder, wearing high heels, smelling and introducing
him to women. Female assistants were thus made to understand that career opportunities were
connected to the degree to which they were attractive to HW and facilitated HW's sexual contact
with women.
C. HW's Use of TWC Employees and Resources in Supporting His Sexual Misconduct
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 18 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
62. HW's assistants were exposed to and required to facilitate HW's sex life as a
condition of employment. HW employed a team of up to five assistants at any given time. Over
the relevant time period, over a dozen people served in these positions due to frequent turnover
and promotions of assistants who met with his favor. HW typically tasked his female assistants
with scheduling, arranging, and facilitating his sexual encounters, which were referred to within
"personals."
the company as
sexual encounters. Over time, the assistants had compiled one list that was maintained on TWC's
electronic shared directory and consisted of names of women, organized by city, whom HW
contacted regularly for sexual encounters. This list was known internally as the "Friends of
Harvey" "FOH"
or list. This list was maintained in the HW Office electronic shared folder, and
was accessible to TWC employees. This list categorized women by city, so that upon arriving in
a particular city with HW, his assistants could readily find the contact information for the women
64. The assistants also utilized a second common method for keeping track of the
women in whom HW was interested sexually or with whom HW had had a sexual liaison, noting
them in HW's electronic TWC contact list with an asterisk. The asterisk was used by assistants
"personals"
to make it easier to distinguish women with whom HW typically scheduled and
65. HW's assistants developed these methods of tracking of the objects of HW's
sexual desire because they were keenly aware that an inability to quickly identify and contact the
specific woman HW referenced posed a risk to their careers. HW made this clear by regularly
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 19 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
"FOHs" personal"
or other would-be sexual contacts were explicitly dubbed "HW or were
deliberately excluded from his schedule; in the latter case other communications among
"personal."
assistants and HW made clear that a time slot had to remain open for HW's
67. All HW assistants were required to send emails dictated by HW as part of their
job duties. However, in addition to sending emails to business contacts or as part of business
operations, HW required his assistants to send emails and text messages, sometimes dictated, to
would-be sexual partners and relay their responses to him, using TWC email accounts and
phones.
68. At times, assistants were required to write multiple emails or text messages in the
course of a single hour-using TWC equipment and email accounts-to an intended sexual
interest if she did not respond or if she rebuffed HW's initial advances.
"personals"
69. HW required his assistants to schedule for sexual activity both during
"personal,"
the workday and after work. Upon arranging a assistants were required to clear or
"personal,"
adjust any and all other scheduled plans that potentially conflicted with the
sometimes at great difficulty. If an assistant failed to do so, HW became enraged and made clear
"personal"
to assistants that compromising a appointment also compromised their careers.
"Bible," assistant-
70. Assistants possessed copies of a document known as the an
created guide to working for HW that was passed down through Assistants. The document sat in
Assistants'
hard copy on several desks, and was accessible to and known to exist by some TWC
executives. The Bible included information about HW's likes and dislikes, and a list of his
"friends"
with directions for assistants on how to arrange HW's extensive and frequent
"personals."
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 20 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
"personals"
71. Knowledge of was not limited to HW's assistants or HW's office
suite. As co-Chair and co-CEO of TWC, HW's unavailability for periods of time during the
"personals"
workday for was well known to TWC executives. According to one witness who
handled calls from TWC executives to HW, executive staff became familiar enough with
"personals"
to know that they generally lasted anywhere from twenty-five minutes to one hour.
"friend,"
Thus, upon learning HW was with a some executives who reached his assistants during
"personals" "personal"
often inquired what time his began in order to estimate when HW's
72. TWC funds paid for the office space and for the hotel rooms used for many of
these personal encounters, which were booked using TWC's travel agent. In addition, while HW
often initially held out job opportunities, invitations or tickets to events, and other access to the
entertainment industry to young women in exchange for sexual relations, he also required that
"friends."
assistants help purchase flowers, gifts, robes, lingerie, and other gifts for his These
73. A female employee who was once responsible for coding HW's expenses as
"business" "personal"
or recounted being told by HW to categorize as many of HW's expenses
"business"
as as possible. She gave the example that if HW had a sexual encounter with a
woman, and that same woman had once auditioned for a TWC project, then she understood that
"business."
she was expected to categorize expenses related to the sexual encounter as
74. HW made it clear to his female employees that anyone who protested his
75. Several of TWC's female creative executives were exposed to and required to
facilitate HW's sex life as a condition of employment. HW demanded that female executives
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 21 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
fulfill tasks for him such as obtaining the contact information of his sexual targets and meeting
with these women in order to put them at ease and facilitate them into private meetings with him.
76. Additionally, female executives were frequently forced to meet with women with
whom HW had sexual relations or hoped to have sexual relations, in order to discuss their
trajectory"
"career and opportunities that HW instructed them to address with the women.
sexual conquests, using access to TWC and other industry opportunities that purportedly would
be made available by his female executives, acting at his direction, as a bargaining chip in return
executives'
for sexual favors. HW used female participation in these meetings to make clear that
his contact with these women was in his professional capacity as CEO of TWC and to lend an
"official"
air to the encounters.
78. Female executives quickly came to understand that some of the meetings that they
were required to attend were not for legitimate business purposes. For example, on some
occasions, female executives were instructed to discuss with HW's actual or intended sexual
conquests career opportunities that the executives knew were not appropriate for the women,
e.g., English-speaking roles with women who did not speak fluent English.
79. Other women came onto TWC payroll at HW's demand, upon information and
belief because HW had or sought to have sexual relations with them and promised them a
position at TWC. It was not uncommon for young women to appear at TWC's New York City or
Los Angeles office on the understanding that they were to be given a paid position, although they
did not appear to have participated in standard interview processes and to fill an unspecific job
position with no clear role or responsibilities. These women would then be given a desk and put
on payroll, much to the dismay and annoyance of other TWC employees. Upon information and
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 22 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
belief, TWC's management asked for a list of these women at one point, pursuant to a review of
company finances. These women, however, were not immediately removed from payroll by
80. HW also used TWC's financial resources to fly women with him or to him for
81. Additionally, HW's drivers in both New York City and Los Angeles were
required to keep condoms and erectile dysfunction injections in the car, in order to provide them
to HW as needed.
82. Certain of HW's erectile dysfunction injections were charged to HW's corporate
credit card, and at least one bonus paid by TWC to an assistant for her assistance in procuring
"personal"
83. It is during these TWC-funded and -facilitated encounters in his office
and hotel rooms that, upon information and belief, HW engaged in unlawful sexual conduct with
numerous women.
84. TWC is responsible for the unlawful conduct described herein. When the legal
violations described herein were committed, HW was a co-owner, co-CEO, and co-Chairman of
TWC. As the most senior member of TWC management, the actions taken by HW in the course
85. Moreover, HW was only able to engage in repeated and persistent unlawful
conduct because of the failure of key members of TWC's management and Board to ensure that
the company complied with relevant nondiscrimination laws and prevent its executives from
engaging in unlawful conduct while representing the company. The company's acquiescence
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 23 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
renders it responsible for HW's misconduct on separate grounds. RW also is liable as a co-owner
and co-CEO of TWC who was aware of HW's misconduct and who failed to take reasonable
Failures of Management
86. Key members of TWC management were fully aware of HW's creation of a
hostile work environment and his sexual harassment of others, yet they did not take reasonable
steps to investigate or stop it, or to protect TWC employees from ongoing victimization. To the
contrary, certain members of TWC management deliberately looked the other way or took
87. The OAG has learned that, while TWC had a policy manual that contained a
policy prohibiting sexual harassment and discrimination, the policy was flouted in practice.
Employees who might have had reporting responsibilities, such as employees with supervisory
responsibilities, did not receive any training or guidance about TWC's sexual harassment and
Director"
to the head of Human Resources (the "Human Resources Director"), who had the authority to
decide whether a complaint had sufficient merit to warrant investigation. The Human Resources
Director's regular practice was to escalate any complaints deemed to be significant to the TWC
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 24 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
89. For example, in a May 2015 email obtained by the OAG, the Human Resources
Director forwarded a complaint to the COO from a woman who worked for TWC, but who was
expected primarily to serve as assistant to HW's daughter. In the email, the Human Resources
nda."
Director stated to the COO: "we need to discuss a settlement and According to material in
HW's personnel file, such a settlement agreement was negotiated soon after the email from the
90. On more than one occasion, upon forwarding a complaint or information about a
complaint to the COO, the Human Resources Director was not involved in any investigation or
resolution process. Based on documents obtained by the OAG to date, such matters were handled
by the COO and other members of TWC senior management, as well as counsel retained to
91. On numerous occasions during the relevant time period, victims of HW's
misconduct complained to the Human Resources Director or to other TWC management about
various aspects of the conduct described herein. On not a single occasion was HW subject to a
92. Evidence gathered during the course of the investigation reflects that the Human
Resources Director was not empowered to take any steps to address HW's ongoing sexual
harassment of female employees. Victims of HW's misconduct have stated that when they
complained to Human Resources about HW's efforts to intimidate them, use sexually demeaning
language to refer to them, and issue verbal threats of sexual or physical harm, the Human
"sympathized"
Resources Director stated, in substance, that he with their plight, that they had a
job"
"tough working for HW, but that there was nothing he could do to address the misconduct.
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 25 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
HW"
informed, in substance, that the Human Resources Director was "going to have to speak to
about the complaint. When the complainant expressed concern that she would be subjected to
retaliation by HW if he were informed about the complaint, the Human Resources Director said
"technically"
that while HW could not retaliate in this manner, he could not prevent HW from
sign."
doing so, stating, in substance "but I mean his name is on the Individuals who complained
94. On certain occasions when individuals did complain to Human Resources, those
complaints were not treated confidentially, nor were they investigated. For example, on one
misconduct by HW. Soon thereafter, the assistant, who had access to HW's email account due to
her role at TWC, saw that her complaint had been forwarded directly to HW via HW's email
account.
misconduct by HW, TWC took steps to separate the employee from the company while securing
an NDA that would prevent the employee from disclosing the misconduct to others or warning
others about the misconduct. These NDAs were contained within settlement agreements entered
into by TWC itself. While the source of the funds used to pay for the monetary component of
any settlement remains under investigation, TWC's participation as a party to settlements, and its
receipt of complaints concerning misconduct leading to those settlements, reflect that members
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 26 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
96. Members of company management also understood that HW was using company
"roster"
resources to facilitate his sexual exploits, including his employment on the payroll of the
of women described above and his use of company resources for sexual encounters. On certain
occasions, company employees expressed concerns about HW's improper charges to company
accounts, but would be dissuaded from following through by fear of angering HW. At a meeting
"roster"
in 2015, TWC's management requested that HW take his of women off of the payroll,
and that he desist from using corporate cards and accounts for inappropriate expenses. While
HW's use of corporate cards after this 2015 meeting remains under investigation, certain
"roster"
members of the remained on staff after that date, and HW suffered no adverse
97. RW, as co-owner, co-Chairman, and co-CEO, was responsible for maintaining a
safe workplace, free of sexual harassment and other unlawful conduct. Yet instead of doing so,
misconduct that was known to RW, or which he was responsible for preventing.
98. For example, RW knew that HW used sexually explicit and demeaning slurs to
refer to female employees, having participated in meetings in which HW used those terms.
Upon information and belief, RW also has admitted to the press that he paid for prior settlements
of claims made by women against HW, after those claims were made known to him as a member
99. RW also received by email in late 2014 and 2015, and was otherwise informed of,
claims of repeated and persistent sexual harassment and misconduct, but he took no measures to
prohibit HW from supervising women or having or seeking sexual contact with TWC employees
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 27 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
or women seeking to do business with TWC, or from HW having private meetings with
employees or women seeking opportunities in hotel rooms or TWC office space, or any other
inappropriately towards women and sexually harassed them. They personally observed numerous
occasions on which HW referred to women using sexually demeaning terms in front of others.
"roster"
They had opportunity to observe the presence of the on TWC's payroll. They also
received or otherwise were made aware of information from complainants. Yet no adverse
employment action was taken against HW due to his power within the company and his
101. TWC's Board also failed to inquire adequately into, or to restrain or prevent, the
repeated and persistent unlawful conduct occurring at TWC. In part this was due to HW's and
RW's effective control of the Board through their own participation on the Board and their
ability to appoint or influence the appointment of others to the Board, leaving a small minority of
the Board truly independent of HW and RW. In part these failings were due to concerns that
HW's removal, or even exposure of his misconduct, would risk harming the financial interests of
members'
company ownership, which included Board members or Board members employers. Finally, in
part the reluctance to restrict or remove HW was due to personal relationships that many Board
members had with HW. The Board's decision to avoid investigating credible claims of
victimizing employees of TWC until his misconduct was revealed by press reports.
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 28 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
102. Reflecting the failings of the Board, the Board failed to investigate adequately
103. Specifically, by early 2015, certain corporate executives at TWC who had
received and handled numerous claims of misconduct from TWC employees, including the
COO, became so concerned about HW's misconduct towards women, as well as his expenditure
of company resources on improper items, that they decided they needed to notify an independent
104. In the private meeting with an independent Board member, certain members of
TWC management carried with them and described complaints contained in HW's personnel
file, as well as their general concerns about HW's treatment of women and his financial
misconduct. They suggested that HW had become harmful to TWC and his conduct presented a
risk to the company. This information should have been cause for immediate follow-up
105. Instead, that information became relevant to negotiations between the Board and
with TWC, entered into in or about 2005, explicitly provided for his termination from the
company only in extreme circumstances, including conviction of a felony offense. (It did not
explicitly prevent the Board from taking actions that would help prevent future recurrence of
misconduct, such as limiting his managerial authority or restricting his ability to supervise
employees or interact with women in his hotel room, but the Board did not undertake any of
these actions.) That original employment contract expired at the end of 2015. The Board was
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 29 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
under no obligation to renew the contract; thus, HW's continued employment could have been
terminated in 2015, or the Board could have insisted that HW take a reduced non-supervisory
role with greater oversight that presented lower risk to the company.
Board members sought access to HW's personnel file so that counsel representing it could use
the personnel file and other information to evaluate whether the Board would recommend
directors'
renewal of HW's contract. HW resisted the independent efforts to obtain a copy of his
personnel file and otherwise investigate his misconduct, on the purported grounds that the
contents of the file would be leaked to the press if disclosed to the Board. There was no basis for
this claim; instead, HW sought to prevent access to his personnel file to avoid discovery of the
extent of his own misconduct. A majority of the Board refused to back the independent
Directors'
efforts to obtain HW's personnel file; thus, the Board failed to undertake efforts that
protect TWC employees from HW's unlawful conduct, the Board in 2015 negotiated a contract
extension with HW that placed no effective restrictions on his activity. The Board did require
HW to, as of 2016, promise to comply prospectively with a Code of Conduct that was written to
address what the Board understood to be HW's prior misconduct, including sexual harassment
and financial impropriety. HW's 2015 contract extension, however, only permitted termination
"willful"
of HW's employment due to a Code of Conduct violation if the violation was and a
majority of the Board, as well as RW, determined that the willful violation had "caused serious
company."
harm to the
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 30 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
108. HW's contract extension also contained an unusual provision that effectively
monetized, rather than prohibited, ongoing acts of sexual harassment and misconduct. In
particular, it stated that if TWC had to "make a payment to satisfy a claim that you [i.e., HW]
Conduct,"
have treated someone improperly in violation of the Company's Code of he would
face escalating financial penalties: $250,000 for the first such instance, "$500,000, for the second
such instance, $750,000 for the third such instance, and $1,000,000 for each such additional
instance."
This contract contained no provision for any penalties if HW personally covered the
costs of any payments necessary to satisfy claims of improper treatment, and it provided for no
adverse employment consequences in the event that one, two, three, or even four or more such
sexual harassment and misconduct with impunity, provided that he paid the costs of any
settlements and that he avoided disclosure of misconduct that might risk causing "serious harm
company."
to the
109. Board minutes reflect that the Board ratified HW's new employment contract
unanimously. No future efforts were undertaken by the Board to investigate HW's misconduct or
TWC's practices concerning that conduct until HW's termination in October 2017. Any efforts
by independent directors to restrain HW's conduct were overcome by HW, RW, and directors
friendly to HW and RW. No penalty payments ever were made by HW pursuant to the
employment contract, and HW was not terminated until after his misconduct was revealed to the
110. In November 2015, after renewal of HW's employment contract, TWC was
presented with specific and detailed allegations of sexual harassment and misconduct by a TWC
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 31 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
employee. Those allegations referenced other witnesses and victims within the company who
could have been interviewed about the claims. That employee also was available to be
111. Out of fear of retaliation and adverse career consequences, the employee agreed
included an NDA. In connection with that settlement, however, the employee specifically
informed TWC through its counsel that she was not withdrawing any of the allegations contained
in the complaint; TWC's counsel agreed to confirm this understanding in writing, informing the
complainant's counsel in a November 6, 2015 letter that in connection with the settlement, "your
client's withdrawal of the Complaint she previously made does not imply any retraction of the
Complaint."
statements made in that Despite this reaffirmation, no effort was made to investigate
any of the allegations contained within the complaint. To the contrary, upon information and
belief, TWC's Human Resources Director was instructed to remove the complaint from HW's
personnel file because it had been withdrawn, and the issues identified by the complaint
remained unexamined and unremedied until HW's expulsion from the company almost two years
later.
112. Absent these failings of corporate management and oversight described herein,
HW would not have been able to continue to engage in the repeated and persistent unlawful
113. The Attorney General repeats and re-alleges, as though fully set forth herein, all
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 32 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
114. New York State Human Rights Law ("NYSHRL"), N.Y. Executive Law §
296(1)(a), provides that it is an unlawful practice for "an employer . . . because of the . . . sex . . .
of any individual, to refuse to hire or employ or to bar or to discriminate against such individual
employment."
in compensation or in terms, conditions or privileges of The NYSHRL is violated
("
alter the conditions or employment hostile workplace harassment").
115. The NYSHRL is also violated when a managerial or supervisory employee trades
or attempts to trade favorable employment terms, conditions, or privileges for sexual favors
116. Through the actions and inactions described above, Respondents HW and TWC
repeatedly and persistently violated the NYSHRL by subjecting employees to a sex-based hostile
work environment, targeting female employees for quid pro quo harassment, and otherwise
discriminating against female employees in the terms, conditions, and privileges of employment.
118. By reason of the conduct alleged above, Respondents HW and TWC engaged in
119. The Attorney General repeats and re-alleges, as though fully set forth herein, all
120. The NYSHRL, N.Y. Executive Law § 296(6), provides that it is "an unlawful
discriminatory practice for any person to aid, abet, [or] compel ... the doing of any of the acts
article."
forbidden under this
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 33 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
121. As alleged above, Respondents RW and TWC repeatedly and persistently aided
and abetted conduct that violates the NYSHRL, namely, the gender-based hostile work
harassment of, quid pro quo harassment of, and discrimination against female employees by
HW.
122. RW holds an ownership interest in TWC and was a senior executive of the
123. TWC, through the actions and inactions of its executives and senior management,
125. Through such unlawful conduct, Respondents RW and TWC engaged in repeated
126. The Attorney General repeats and re-alleges, as though fully set forth herein, all
127. The New York City Human Rights Law ("NYCHRL"), New York City
well"
128. The NYCHRL is violated when employees are treated "less than others,
employees less well than male employees through gender-based hostile workplace harassment,
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 34 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
130. Pursuant to N.Y.C. Admin. Law 8-107(13)(b), TWC is liable for the violations of
the NYCHRL because the individual who personally engaged in the harassment and
131. TWC is also liable because its executives and senior management knew of HW's
harassing and discriminatory conduct but through their actions and inactions, acquiesced in such
conduct.
132. TWC is also liable because TWC executives and senior management failed to
take immediate and appropriate investigative or remedial action despite knowledge of HW's
unlawful conduct.
133. Alternatively, TWC is liable for HW's unlawful conduct because it should have
known of HW's actions and failed to exercise reasonable diligence to prevent his sexual
134. The unlawful discriminatory practices described herein were the result of the
Respondents'
willful, wanton, and malicious acts.
135. By reason of the conduct alleged above, Respondents engaged in repeated and
FOURTH CAUSE OF
ACTION
Pursuant to Executive Law § 63(12)
Denial of Equal Protection Under the New York Civil Rights Law
Against All Respondents
136. The Attorney General repeats and re-alleges, as though fully set forth herein, all
137. New York Civil Rights Law § 40-c provides that "No person shall, because of
race, creed, color, national origin, sex, marital status or disability . . . be subjected to any
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 35 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
discrimination of his civil rights . . . by any other person or by any firm, corporation or institution
."
. . . ~
equal treatment in terms, conditions, and privileges of employment and of the right to be free
persons based on sex in violation of New York Civil Rights Law §40-c.
140. The Attorney General repeats and re-alleges, as though fully set forth herein, all
141. A violation of state, federal or local law constitutes illegality within the meaning
142. HW, operating in his capacity as TWC's co-owner and co-CEO, and using TWC
employees and resources to facilitate his unlawful activities, repeatedly and persistently violated
New York Penal Law provisions prohibiting forcible touching (Penal Law § 130.52), sexual
abuse (Penal Law § 130.55), and coercion (Penal Law § 135.60), unlawful sexual misconduct
(Penal Law § 130.20), criminal sexual acts (Penal Law § 130.40), and attempts to commit the
143. Through the conduct, policies, and/or practices described herein, Respondents
engaged in persistent and repeated violations of NYSHRL, NYCHRL, NYCRL, and NY Penal
Law in the carrying on, conducting, and transaction of business in violation of New York
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 36 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
63(12) and NYSHRL § 296(1) & 296(6), CRL § 40(c), and NYCHRL § 8-107(1)(a):
NYSHRL § 296(1) & 296(6), CRL § 40(c), NYCHRL § 8-107(1)(a), and relevant
provisions of the Penal Law, and from engaging in the illegal acts and practices
2. Directing Respondents to pay a civil penalty to the State of New York in the sum of
$250,000 for each violation of NYCHRL § 8-107(1)(a), and $500 for each violation
of CRL § 40(c);
3. Directing Respondents to pay restitution and damages in the amount of the harm to
Respondents'
the victims of illegal conduct in connection with its hostile workplace
4. Ordering such remedial equitable relief as is warranted based on the illegal acts and
with the prohibitions on continued unlawful conduct; freeing women who signed
jurisdiction of the Attorney General and this Court, undermine compliance with the
terms of any judgment, or conceal proceeds of any sale of TWC or any of its assets;
and
6. Granting such other and further relief as the Court deems just and proper.
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 37 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 1 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
Respectfully Submitted,
ERIC T. SCHNEIDERMAN
212-416-8250
By: __ /s
ANJANA SAMANT
Assistant Attorney General
Civil Rights Bureau
[email protected]
HOWARD MASTER
Senior Enforcement Counsel
AMANDA ADDISON
Volunteer Assistant Attorney General
Civil Rights Bureau
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 38 of 38
CAUTION: THIS DOCUMENT HAS NOT YET BEEN REVIEWED BY THE COUNTY CLERK. (See below.) INDEX NO. UNASSIGNED
NYSCEF DOC. NO. 2 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 02/11/2018
I~
+. )'.y<'yLqkOS
STATE OFNEWYORK
OFFICE OF THEATTORNEYGENERAL
Please exempt the New York Attorney General's Office from the filing fee for its Verified
Petition in the above-captioned matter, pursuant to Section 161 of the Executive Law of the State
of New York.
Respectfully submitted,
/s/
Anjana Samant
Assistant Attorney General
Civil Rights Bureau
120 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, NY 10271 • PHONE (212) 416-6348• FAX (212) 416-6030 • www.AG.NY.GOV•
This is a copy of a pleading filed electronically pursuant to New York State court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5-b(d)(3)(i))
CIVIL [email protected]
which, at the time of its printout from the court system's electronic website, had not yet been reviewed and
approved by the County Clerk. Because court rules (22 NYCRR §202.5[d]) authorize the County Clerk to reject
filings for various reasons, readers should be aware that documents bearing this legend may not have been
accepted for filing by the County Clerk. 1 of 1