CBS Board Says Les Moonves Will Not Receive $120 Million Severance

Les Moonves
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The board of directors for CBS Corp. said Monday it found grounds to terminate ousted CEO 'for cause,' and will not pay a severance.

The board of directors for CBS Corp. said Monday it found grounds to terminate ousted CEO Leslie Moonves "for cause" and will not pay out a severance package worth $120 million. In a statement, the board said it made its decision following the completion of a monthslong investigation into allegations of harassment and assault against Moonves and cultural issues throughout CBS and CBS News.

"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," the board said.

The board also said the investigation had concluded that "harassment and retaliation" are not pervasive at CBS, though it acknowledged past instances of "improper and unprofessional conduct." The CBS board has not said whether it would publicly release the results of the investigation.

The statement said past policies had not "reflected a high institutional priority on preventing harassment and retaliation," calling out a lack of resources devoted to human resources, training and diversity.

The findings are the result of an investigation by two law firms — Debevoise & Plimpton and Covington & Burling — which the board hired in August. The investigation comes 13 months after the firing of Charlie Rose, who was co-host of CBS This Morning before being ousted over reports of sexual misconduct. 

Moonves was fired in September following allegations of sexual harassment and assault. He has denied any wrongdoing.

First published by CBS News on December 17, 2018

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