Dan Rather Sues CBS CEO Moonves, Ex-CBS President Heyward For $70 Million
04 August 2009 - 9:33AM
Dow Jones News
Former CBS Evening News anchor Dan Rather fired another salvo
Monday in his efforts to pursue damages against his former
employers.
Rather sued Leslie Moonves, CBS Corp.'s (CBS) chief executive,
and Andrew Heyward, CBS News's former president, for fraud in New
York State Supreme Court in Manhattan Monday, seeking $20 million
in compensatory damages and $50 million in punitive damages.
Last month, a state judge reinstated a fraud claim by Rather in
a separate $70 million lawsuit against CBS.
Rather has alleged in part that CBS violated his contract by
failing to provide him enough airtime on "60 Minutes" or "60
Minutes II" after removing him as anchor of CBS Evening News in
March 2005 following a controversy over a 2004 report about
President George W. Bush's service in the Texas Air National
Guard.
Rather, who first joined CBS News in 1962, also claims CBS
conducted a biased investigation - instead of the independent probe
it promised into the underlying story and its production. Rather
left the network in June 2006.
The new lawsuit claims CBS's wrongful actions were directed by
Moonves, Heyward and Sumner Redstone, chief executive of Viacom
Inc. (VIA), CBS's then-corporate parent. Redstone is not a
defendant in the new lawsuit.
CBS was spun off from Viacom in 2006.
Moonves, Heyward and Redstone were previously dismissed as
defendants in Rather's case against CBS, which was originally filed
in 2007.
"Most of Rather's claims already have been rejected by the court
- including all his previous claims against Messrs. Moonves and
Heyward," CBS said in a statement Monday. "From even a cursory
review of the latest complaint, it's clear that the new claim is
deficient, as well. We will move to dismiss and are confident we
will prevail."
-By Chad Bray, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-227-2017;
chad.bray@dowjones.com