This lawsuit against Fox News alleges that a Fox News personality, Ed Henry, raped and sexually harassed the plaintiff, who worked there. The district court dismissed the case, and the Court of Appeals affirms.
The case is Eckhart v. Fox News, a summary order issued on April 24. Plaintiff sues under the New York City Human Rights Law, which requires proof that the employer knew or should have known about the defendant's offensive behavior but did nothing to remedy it. If that is the case, then the employer (and its deep pockets) are on the hook. But, affirming the district court ruling, the Court of Appeals holds that plaintiff cannot meet her burden of proof.
As the Second Circuit (Carney, Robinson and Perez) sees it, plaintiff "undisputedly never told anyone at Fox about any of her sexual encounters with Henry while she was an employee. And it is undisputed that Henry never told any Fox employees about their encounters until he was interviewed after Eckhart lodged her sexual harassment complaint." Instead, Fox News learned about these allegations after plaintiff was fired, when her lawyer reported it to Fox which, that day, hired outside counsel to investigate and interview Henry. Less than a week later, after outside counsel reported their findings to Fox, Henry was fired the next day.
Plaintiff can also win the case if a jury may find that Fox News should have known about Henry's sexual harassment. The evidence is not there, the Second Circuit holds, stating:
Though Fox later learned of Henry’s other extramarital affairs and workplace conduct towards women, the record evidence shows that the only fact known to Fox prior to the February 2017 rape was that Henry had a consensual extramarital affair with a “stripper in Las Vegas.” Following that revelation, Fox suspended Henry, took him off the air for several months, reduced his annual pay, and removed him from the role of Chief White House Correspondent. While he was suspended, Henry went to a sexual rehabilitation therapy and treatment program suggested by Fox.
Plaintiff's response to this holding is as follows: Fox must have known about Henry's improper sexual workplace conduct that later surfaced because it would be implausible that Fox News would send him to sex addiction therapy on the basis of a single consensual affair. There is some logic to this argument, and I wonder if a jury might buy it. But the Court of Appeals holds this argument is speculative and is not rooted in any permissible inferences.