Harvey Weinstein scandal could expose a 'murky, untested' area of the law
Harvey Weinstein. (REUTERS/Steve Crisp)
Harvey Weinstein. (REUTERS/Steve Crisp)

The actress Rose McGowan, the Italian model Ambra Battilana, two Miramax employees, and an employee of the Weinstein Company have at least two things in common.

First, these women all accused the now-disgraced Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein of sexual misconduct. They also all entered into into settlement agreements that effectively bought their silence about that alleged misconduct for years, according to The New York Times.

“What I think happens when you have these nondisclosure agreements is that everybody assumes it’s just them,” says L. Camille Hébert, a professor at The Ohio State University’s law school and an expert on sexual harassment and workplace discrimination. These types of agreements, she says, give people in positions of power the ability to hide patterns of harassment or abuse.

‘A murky and untested area of the law’

The New York Times’ revelations on Oct. 5 that Weinstein paid off his accusers have spurred more than 40 women to come forward to accuse him of harassment or assault — but the report has also started a bigger conversation about sexual harassment and sexual assault, especially in the workplace. Anybody on Twitter (TWTR) or Facebook (FB) in recent days has likely seen women, and some men, tell their own stories of harassment or assault using the hashtag #metoo.

Some participants in the #metoo campaign may very well be defying confidentiality clauses in agreements like the ones that Weinstein’s accusers have agreed to.

But in recent years, these clauses have faced increased scrutiny, with some judges even throwing them out because they’re against “public policy,” according to Hébert.

The #metoo campaign and Weinstein allegations may end up empowering even more women to violate these clauses — “almost sort of daring the former employer to go after them,” according to David C. Yamada, director of the New Workplace Institute at Suffolk University’s law school.

Rose McGowan. (Photo by Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP, File)
Rose McGowan. (Photo by Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP, File)

In theory, employers could sue these women for violating these agreements. But it’s unclear how this litigation would play out since most accusers end up complying with these deals for fear of getting sued. As Yamada noted to Yahoo Finance, “This is a murky and untested area of law.”

‘Cost of doing business’

While this might be a relatively untested area of the law, confidentiality clauses in settlements with employers are nothing new in the U.S.

Over the last 20 years they have become increasingly popular — to the point where there’s almost a presumption that there will be some kind of nondisclosure clause in an employment-related settlement,” Yamada told Yahoo Finance.