Fox News wins a lawsuit from the producer on Ed Henry, rape

Fox News will not have to face a lawsuit filed by a former participant producer accused of ignoring the risks he was raped by former White House correspondent Ed Henry.
On Wednesday, the American boycott judge, Rooney Abrams, rejected sexual assault, sex trafficking, porn revenge, harassment and revenge demands against the network while allowing a majority of her case against Henry to move forward in the trial.
The lawsuit, which was filed in 2020 in the New York Federal Court, included allegations that Eckhart had years of sexual harassment from Henry, which was violently peak in a hotel room. The alleged incident followed Henry forced her to a sexual relationship by threatening her career and assaulting her at Network offices in New York.
Fox News confirmed that it was not possible for Henry to attack Eckhart, who joined the network in 2013 as an administrative assistant and was promoted to an assistant product, because he did not learn his alleged bad behavior until after years. He denied revenge allegations, saying that she did not complain of sexual harassment before being expelled. Henry said that his relationship with Eckhart was mutual.
In Wednesday’s decision, the court sided with the network whose administration had not failed to prevent Henry from attacking Eckhart. “There is no direct evidence that Fox News was familiar with the alleged harassment of Henry for Eckhart before it happened,” Abrams wrote, noting that she admitted that she had not told anyone in the company about their relationship until after it was finished in 2020.
Based on a brief judgment, Eckhart argued that the Fox News supervisors knew that Henry was harassing other women in the network. She referred to the network that directed him to receive sexual rehabilitation treatment in 2016 after it was revealed that he was participating in an external relationship.
However, the court said that Fox News “did not know many of them until after Eckhart and Henry’s final sexual interview in 2017.” He added: “Due to the lack of evidence that Fox News has learned about these affairs until April 2017 or later, no reasonable jury can find that it is noticeable that Henry will attack her.”
Fox News was not about to notify the alleged misconduct of Henry until Ickhardt first informed the network through its lawyer in 2020, according to the matter. Once she learned of these allegations, the court said that it had achieved and finished it after six days.
Henry and Eckhart presented the filming of the two meeting of the two meeting for a drink in 2014 at the New York Hotel. By telling Henry, she accepted an invitation to his room, where they had sex by mutual consent. By telling Eckhart, she closed the door to the room, threw it on the wall and had sex with it. She claimed that she could not refuse his sexual progress because she fears her consequences for her career, noting another incident in 2017 that she said she was raped and beaten violently.
Henry will face an experience that is scheduled to start in May due to the claims of attack, battery, sex trafficking and harassment.
Fox News did not immediately respond to a request for comment.