Current:Home > InvestOpinion: WWE can continue covering for Vince McMahon or it can do the right thing -NextFrontier Finance
Opinion: WWE can continue covering for Vince McMahon or it can do the right thing
View
Date:2025-04-15 08:28:28
The only people who fear the truth are those with something to hide.
That might seem obvious. But it’s worth remembering as the attorney for the woman who said she was sex trafficked and abused by Vince McMahon asks World Wrestling Entertainment to release current and former employees from non-disclosure agreements.
If WWE and parent company Endeavor Group Holdings are as committed to rooting out a toxic, misogynistic culture as they claim, they should have no objection to waiving the NDAs. They should want all the misdeeds and indignities committed by McMahon and his minions laid bare so there can be no confusion about what the company stands for, and what it will and won’t tolerate going forward.
If they don’t, the very obvious question is why not.
“If they have nothing to hide, then they should prove it,” Ann E. Callis, the attorney for Janel Grant, who detailed years of exploitation and degradation in a January lawsuit against McMahon, told USA TODAY Sports.
NDAs are designed to allow companies to protect private information. Trade secrets. Business practices. Financial information. Customer lists. It’s reasonable to see why a company wouldn’t want those matters made public and why employees would be asked to promise that they won’t.
But the NDAs that Callis is referring to, the NDAs that WWE seems to have made liberal use of under McMahon’s leadership, serve only to harm.
Often tied to financial settlements, these NDAs are meant to silence people, both those who were subjected to abuse and those who were witness to it. That is problematic enough, cloaking those who’ve been wronged in shrouds of secrecy and shame. Worse, though, is that these NDAs allow the people causing the harm, and those who’ve enabled them, to duck responsibility.
If no one knows the boss is a sexual predator because those who do are legally barred from saying anything, he can continue to prey on other employees. If no one is allowed to speak about a hostile workplace environment, there will be no incentive to change it.
“The toxic and sexualized culture at WWE during Mr. McMahon’s tenure as CEO and Chairman was open and notorious. Yet what has been publicly reported is only part of the picture,” Callis wrote in a letter sent Monday to attorneys and leadership for WWE and Endeavor.
“We have had witnesses come to us confidentially and describe a sexualized culture at WWE that victimizes women and men. We have received reports that many victims are currently afraid to come forward because of punitive non-disclosure and non-disparagement agreements,” Callis continued. “… Survivors are revictimized every time they are muzzled and forced to live in fear of attack from a multi-billion-dollar business that can hire an army of lawyers to bury them in legal fees if they speak the truth.”
Companies might say these NDAs protect people who’ve been abused, that they keep the world from knowing embarrassing details about their lives and shield them from criticism. But that’s a convenient excuse. They’re a way for companies to sweep their dirty little secrets under the rug so no one else will know.
Daniel Snyder used them when he owned the Washington Commanders to quash details about the abusive behavior that he was both condoning and committing. USA Gymnastics forced McKayla Maroney to sign one after she acknowledged being sexually abused by former team physician Larry Nassar.
Serial predators Harvey Weinstein, Bill Cosby and Bill O'Reilly used NDAs so often they prompted the rarest of all things: bipartisan agreement in Congress. The Speak Out Act, which became law in December 2022, prohibits the enforcement of NDAs and non-disparagement clauses related to sexual assault or sexual harassment.
When Snyder, Cosby and Weinstein are the company you’re in, it’s a sign — a flashing neon one — that you might want to rethink your actions.
If you really do want to change your company's culture and ensure it's no longer a breeding ground for abuse, that is.
Grant’s NDA with WWE might be unenforceable because her lawsuit wasn’t filed until January, more than a year after Speak Out became law. But there are an untold number of other WWE employees whose NDAs pre-date Speak Out, and they need to be heard, too.
No doubt it will be embarrassing for WWE for more tawdry stories to pour out. Until there's a full accounting of all the wrongs McMahon did and all the people he harmed, however, there's always going to be something else out there, another secret certain to cause damage when it's finally spilled.
Honesty isn't simply the best way forward for WWE. It's the only way.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.
veryGood! (31)
Related
- 3 years after the NFL added a 17th game, the push for an 18th gets stronger
- Elaborate scheme used drones to drop drugs in prisons, authorities in Georgia say
- She bought a $100 tail and turned her wonder into a magical mermaid career
- Brittany Mahomes Appears Makeup-Free as She Holds Both Kids Sterling and Bronze in Sweet Photo
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- Age vs. Excellence. Can Illinois find way to knock off UConn in major March Madness upset?
- NCAA discovers 3-point lines at women's tournament venue aren't the same distance from key
- Virginia Seeks Millions of Dollars in Federal Funds Aimed at Reducing Pollution and Electrifying Transportation and Buildings
- Kourtney Kardashian Cradles 9-Month-Old Son Rocky in New Photo
- Are banks, post offices, UPS and FedEx open on Easter 2024? Here's what to know
Ranking
- Illinois Gov. Pritzker calls for sheriff to resign after Sonya Massey shooting
- Mega Millions winning numbers for March 29 drawing; $20 million jackpot
- Small plane crash kills 2 people in California near Nevada line, police say
- How Nick Cannon and His Kids Celebrated Easter 2024
- Illinois governor calls for resignation of sheriff whose deputy fatally shot Black woman in her home
- Numbers have been drawn for an estimated $935 million Powerball jackpot
- Kraft Heinz Faces Shareholder Vote On Its ‘Deceptive’ Recycling Labels
- In Key Bridge collapse, Baltimore lost a piece of its cultural identity
Recommendation
The Daily Money: Disney+ wants your dollars
Alabama's Mark Sears has taken what his mom calls the backroad route to basketball glory
King Charles Celebrates Easter Alongside Queen Camilla in Rare Public Appearance Since Cancer Diagnosis
Whoopi Goldberg says she uses weight loss drug Mounjaro: 'I was 300 pounds'
Plunge Into These Olympic Artistic Swimmers’ Hair and Makeup Secrets
UFL Week 1 winners and losers: USFL gets bragging rights, Thicc-Six highlights weekend
LSU's Kim Mulkey's controversial coaching style detailed in Washington Post story
A woman, 19, is killed and 4 other people are wounded in a Chicago shooting early Sunday