The #MeToo movement is a boon for big law firms
Les Moonves, chairman and CEO of CBS Corporation. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP, File)
Les Moonves, chairman and CEO of CBS Corporation. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP, File)

CBS Corp.’s CEO, Les Moonves, has become the latest powerful man to be accused of sexually harassing and intimidating women whose careers he’d held sway over.

In response to a New Yorker article outlining those claims on Friday, the CBS (CBS) board said it’s selecting an outside law firm to investigate the allegations — which include the assertion that sexual misconduct bled into other parts of CBS such as “60 Minutes” and CBS News. (Moonves, for his part, issued a statement saying, “I have never misused my position to harm or hinder anyone’s career.”)

In the past, companies were more likely to enlist their human-resources departments to probe allegations of sexual misconduct at the highest level.

“Obviously, that presents certain conflicts,” Minna Kotkin, the director of the Brooklyn Law School Employment Law Clinic, told Yahoo Finance. “If you were the alleged victim of a harassment situation, you may not find the HR department’s investigation particularly neutral … The HR division’s goal … is to protect the company as much as possible.”

‘It’s certainly a great revenue generator for law firms’

Companies’ handling of misconduct claims has evolved in recent years and in the wake of the #MeToo movement, which gathered steam in October after The New York Times exposed sordid allegations against media mogul Harvey Weinstein. More and more, corporate America is looking beyond its own walls to probe allegations of misconduct — specifically, it’s enlisting corporate law firms with robust employment practices.

Of course, hiring a law firm can be expensive. Lawyers bill an average of $475 an hour, according to a recent report on the legal industry that averaged the rates of attorneys ranging from lower-level associates to partners with equity in firms.

“It’s certainly a great revenue generator for law firms,” Kotkin said. “But it’s a big expense for companies.”

Mike Cagney, CEO, Chairman and co-founder of SoFi. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Mike Cagney, CEO, Chairman and co-founder of SoFi. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

The companies that have incurred this expense include SoFi, whose board reportedly hired the law firm Sullivan & Cromwell last year to investigate allegations of pervasive sexual harassment. Sullivan & Cromwell found evidence that then-CEO Mike Cagney used company resources to pursue a romantic relationship with an employee, several people familiar with the matter told The New York Times. He was ousted last September.

Also last year, 21st Century Fox enlisted the law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison to look into allegations against conservative TV host Bill O’Reilly before his ouster. And NPR, yet another news outlet whose higher-ups were accused of sexual harassment, retained Morgan Lewis to look into allegations against Michael Oreskes, the former Senior Vice President of News.