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McDonalds’ Former CEO Is Denying Claims That He Lied About Relationships With Employees

Photo credit: Drew Angerer - Getty Images
Photo credit: Drew Angerer - Getty Images

From Delish

Update, August 17, 2020 10:17 a.m.: Former McDonald's CEO Steve Easterbrook is denying the company's claims that he hid his physical relationships with employees, according to Bloomberg.

In a court filing obtained by the outlet, Easterbrook's representation called the suit "meritless" and "misleading" and said that the company was aware of his relationships with subordinates at the time of his separation from the company. McDonald's previously said in its lawsuit that Easterbrook told them at the time that a sole, non-physical relationship with a staffer was the "only one of an intimate nature he had ever had with a McDonald’s employee" and accused him of lying and destroying info related to three sexual relationships with other employees.

"McDonald’s—a sophisticated entity represented by numerous internal and external experts when it entered into the separation agreement—is aware it cannot credibly allege a breach of contract claim,” Easterbrook’s lawyers said in the filing. "Instead, it improperly seeks to manufacture claims for a breach of fiduciary duty or fraud."

Easterbrook's filing also accused the company of filing its lawsuit in the wrong court (it was filed in Delaware, where the company is incorporated, but McDonald's is based in Illinois). In response to this filing, McDonald's told Bloomberg: "McDonald’s stands by its complaint, both the factual assertions and the court in which it was filed."

Original, August 10, 2020 1:09 p.m.: McDonald's is suing former CEO Steve Easterbrook over allegations that he lied about employee relationships during an initial investigation into his behavior.

Easterbrook "separated" from McDonald's in November 2019, and at the time said that he "violated company policy and demonstrated poor judgment involving a recent consensual relationship with an employee." In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the company said a previous investigation had found that it was a "non-physical, consensual relationship" with one employee and that Easterbrook told investigators the relationship was the "only one of an intimate nature he had ever had with a McDonald’s employee."

But a new investigation allegedly found Easterbrook "lied to the Company and the Board and destroyed information regarding inappropriate personal behavior and in fact had been involved in sexual relationships with three additional Company employees prior to his termination, all in violation of Company policy," according to the filing.

In the suit, McDonald's says that its new probe allegedly found "dozens of nude, partially nude, or sexually explicit photographs and videos" of women, including company employees, that he had sent as attachments from his business email account to his personal email account. McDonald's says that Easterbrook also "approved an extraordinary stock grant, worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, for one of those employees in the midst of their sexual relationship."

At the time of his departure last year, Easterbrook received 26 weeks severance pay, in addition to "prorated bonuses as warranted," but in light of its new investigation, McDonald's said "it would not have approved the terms of the Separation Agreement" if the board had been aware of these additional allegations and investigated them. The company is now seeking his exit compensation back, which The New York Times valued at around $40 million.

McDonald's is seeking to align his exit payout with that of a "for cause" termination, according to an email that current McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinski sent to the McDonald's system on August 10. In the note, Kempczinski discusses the lawsuit, as well as McDonald's commitment to upholding its values and "act as a positive force for change."

"McDonald’s does not tolerate behavior from any employee that does not reflect our values. These actions reflect a continued demonstration of this commitment," he wrote.

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