Home » Out-of-court settlement of sexual harassment suits: what does it mean?

Comments

Out-of-court settlement of sexual harassment suits: what does it mean? — 8 Comments

  1. Back in the late 80s I worked at a very large company. Women were just starting to come into what was still a largely male division of the company. One day we had a meeting with headquarters personnel in which sexual harassement was the topic. The company’s position on the subject was unusually blunt. The first accusation would result in our immediate termination. Period, end of story. And no proof would be needed of the veracity of the accusation. There would be no second chances…

    The company lawyers assured us that fighting a possible wrongful termination lawsuit was preferable to having to fight a sexual harassment lawsuit. In which a jury might find the company culpable in having known that the accused had previous accusations made against them that the company had provably ignored.

    The company spokesman conducting the meeting closed by bluntly stating that none of us were worth the millions the company might lose if any of us were sexual predators who the company had kept on after a first accusation.

    That was not a happy group of guys who left that meeting but there was no doubt in any of our minds as to where the company stood on that issue.

  2. Neo: “Out-of-court settlement of sexual harassment suits: what does it mean?”

    It means that legal costs are out of control, that harassment charges can often be false, that sexual harrassers are prepared to buy off their victims, and that so much of it is unprovable (He said, she said.)

    It is mostly all about money – cheaper to settle than go to court. For sexual abusers with money it is a business deal. For the accuser, money is often the main goal. In a perfect world it wouldn’t happen. I have no solutions except for society to become more ethical and less sex and money crazed. Seems like the Bible warns us about those things, but we don’t heed the warnings. It is sad.

  3. Geoffrey Britain:

    That sounds like a much more extreme position than is described by the person in the article, and more extreme than what I’ve read about in other articles. I have very little corporate experience myself, and what I have is very very old and irrelevant to this question. Your experience is pretty old, too, and I wonder if that company still has the same policy today.

    However, I bet the CEO of your company wasn’t being told the same thing as the rest of you, even back then. Weinstein was his company’s raison déªtre. And O’Reilly was a huge star at Fox.

  4. All good points neo. I left the company a few years after that meeting and lost contact with other employees but I imagine that the policies have changed to some degree, perhaps significantly.

    No doubt high level executives are treated differently. But if those policies (for the troops) do remain largely unchanged, it potentially puts the company at greater risk in the case of a high level executive who is exposed as a serial abuser.

    In that case, if evidence emerged that was compelling… a jury would be likely to see the double standard as unforgivably hypocritical and punish the company to the maximum amount possible. And if a pattern emerged of multiple executives at that company (63 BILLION! worldwide yearly revenue) had engaged in serial harassment, it could lead to truly astronomical awards.

    That said, at the very top… here’s corporate America’s dirty little secret; the CEOs are sitting on each others Board of Directors. In a “you scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours” arrangement, they all vote each other stratospheric amounts of stock options, which is where the real money lies. In lesser but still substantive amounts that same dynamic applies to the VP level as well. That results in top management placing short term gain as the top priority since it drives stock valuations upward. After 5-10 years the executives can cash in on a huge windfall, which I suspect is a major factor in Wall Street’s current 23,000 DOW.

  5. It is worthwhile to consider who is worse in these tawdry stories: the odious perpetrators or their enablers. By the way, this neoneocon post gets my consciousness award for striking exactly the right reaction tone of intelligent contemplation.
    In the long run (many lifetimes of a soul), everyone is innocent, and everything that happened was for the sake of expanding awareness.
    The mind impulsively distinguishes good from evil, and guilty from innocent. But the point of it all is simply to become aware of all those things – including the mind’s impulses. Understanding that is the basis of forgiveness.

  6. It means lawyers win again. 70-90% of the damages goes to pay for lawyers, who then pay the bars and other money laundering schemes that then pay for Leftist schemes like BLM.

  7. America has a spiritual problem. All this money and sex problems with the law? They would fix themselves if America fixed their own souls… but they won’t, repenting costs more than a few million after all.

  8. I have no solutions except for society to become more ethical and less sex and money crazed. Seems like the Bible warns us about those things, but we don’t heed the warnings.

    Maybe christmas would actually have to read the bible first? Rather than listening to a pastor that’s usually corrupt and mistaken, droning on and on for hours about what he thinks the scriptures mean?

    As for me, do I know what’s in the bible?

    https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1+Corinthians+6%3A1-8%2CEphesians+4%3A31-32&version=ESV

    I remember stuff like that almost immediately. It isn’t that hard to look it up afterwards. It even has DIVERSITY in translations, so that the King James only boys can snub their noses at the rest of you heretics that don’t read KJ bible only…

    At least they aren’t burning heretics at the stake, as christians used to do under the Vatican… then again, that might solve a few things between christians, atheists, agnostics, and deists.

    Protestants think one needs a theological degree and pastor title, to understand a book written by ancient humans… come on. Even if the English is bad, just read the Hebrew and Greek with Strong’s concordance. Westerners are used to baby milk ingestion, getting their scriptural knowledge from Gatekeepers, the same way Americans used to get their “news” from the “4th estate”.

    After 5-10 years the executives can cash in on a huge windfall, which I suspect is a major factor in Wall Street’s current 23,000 DOW.

    Their insider trading is no where near as ludicrously lucre filled as HRC and Congress’ insider trading. Nothing like banning old fluorescent bulbs and getting in CFL bulbs, when you know how the vote will tally, and buy up all the stock and sell off all the trash bonds, before the “masses” in Wall Street figure it out.

    Usually for stock markets, there are the 3-6 month bumps that go up and then stabilize, or go down and then stabilize. That is usually the indication that “somebody with inside knowledge” bought or sold off enough to destabilize the market temporarily. The market stabilizes, people don’t panic. It’s when everybody realizes what is going on, that they then panic, and it either sells all or buys all. This usually happens 6 months later.

    In 2008, the Housing Crash, Soros already cashed out, way before that October surprise. Congress did too. You can just check the Wall Street trade by the hour, by the day, by the week for it. It will show up, if people have the eyes to see it.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

HTML tags allowed in your comment: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>