Dec 10, 2007 6:30 pm US/Eastern
MSG, Isiah Thomas Settle Sexual Harassment Case
NEW YORK (AP) ―
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Isiah Thomas and Madison Square Garden settled a lawsuit with Anucha Browne Sanders for $11.6 million.
David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images
Madison Square Garden and New York Knicks coach Isiah Thomas have
settled the sexual harassment case brought by a former team executive
who had been awarded $11.6 million in punitive damages by a jury, both
sides announced Monday.
The
deal came as compensatory damages were about to be added and as the
executive, Anucha Browne Sanders, was preparing to return to U.S.
District Court in Manhattan, where her description several weeks ago of
her ordeal with the Knicks exposed the club's tawdry side, from its
dysfunctional clubhouse to its star player's sexual exploits with a
team intern.
Besides compensatory damages, the Knicks had been
facing the possibility they might be ordered to pay what was likely to
be millions of dollars in legal fees. By settling, the Knicks avoid
that, while Brown Sanders gets her money faster and avoids the
possibility of having her award reduced on appeal.
"I am
extremely pleased that we have reached a settlement," Browne Sanders
said in a statement. "The jury's verdict in this case sent a powerful
and enduring message that harassment and retaliation at Madison Square
Garden will not be tolerated. ... It has been a long journey, but I
believe that justice has been done."
MSG said: "We don't feel
any less strongly than we did throughout the entire episode. The
outcome was a travesty of justice, and we vehemently disagree with the
jury's decision; however, at the strong request of (the NBA
commissioner) and in the interest of focusing on basketball, we can all
agree that it is time for us to move on and put this issue behind us."
Thomas
added: "As I have said before, I am completely innocent. This decision
doesn't change that. However, this is the best course for Madison
Square Garden, and I fully support it."
The settlement, whose
terms were not immediately disclosed, means the end to legal
proceedings in the case, which was supposed to resume before U.S.
District Judge Gerard E. Lynch this week. The judge was set to decide
how much Browne Sanders was owed in compensatory damages, a payout that
usually involves lost wages and future loss of income.
Although
Browne Sanders had demanded the right to resume working for the Knicks,
one of her lawyers, Kevin Mintzer, said she will continue working at
the University of Buffalo as the athletic director.
Mintzer refused to divulge the amount of the settlement, as did representatives for MSG and the Thomas.
Because
the jury was unable to reach a verdict on one of the accusations
against Thomas, the possibility of another trial loomed. It would have
brought with it another wave of negative publicity about the team and
the off-court escapades that made the first trial a feeding frenzy for
those interested in the inner workings of one of the National
Basketball Association's most storied franchises.
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