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Dallas Mavericks Owner, Mark Cuban, Donates $10M After Investigation Reveals Female Employees Were Being Sexually Assaulted

Dallas Mavericks Owner, Mark Cuban, Donates $10M After Investigation Reveals Female Employees Were Being Sexually Assaulted

Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban is giving $10 million to associations that assistance women influenced by domestic abuse and support the enlisting of women in influential positions

Following an independent investigation, it was discovered that few present and previous Mavericks representatives submitted “genuine workplace misconduct,” as indicated by the discoveries discharged by the NBA on Wednesday (Sept. 19). The New Jersey Attorney General Anne Milgram initiated the examination and discovered 15 female Mavericks workers were casualties of provocation by previous CEO Terdema Ussery. A portion of the women’s accounts incorporate “unseemly remarks, contacting, and coercive kissing,” which a few women were subjected to for very nearly 20 years.

NBA Commissioner Adam Siver announced in a statement,

“The findings of the independent investigation are disturbing and heartbreaking and no employee in the NBA, or any workplace for that matter, should be subject to the type of working environment described in the report.”

“We appreciate that Mark Cuban reacted swiftly, thoroughly and transparently to the allegations first set forth in Sports Illustrated – including the immediate hiring of Cynthia Marshall as CEO to effect change, but as Mark has acknowledged, he is ultimately responsible for the culture and conduct of his employees,” the statement read. “While nothing will undo the harm caused by a select few former employees of the Mavericks, the workplace reforms and the $10 million that Mark has agreed to contribute are important steps toward rectifying this past behavior and shining a light on a pervasive societal failing – the inability of too many organizations to provide a safe and welcoming workplace for women.”

Cuban additionally apologized to the women included.

“First, just an apology to the women involved,” Cuban told ESPN. “… This is not something that just is an incident and then it’s over. It stays with people. It stays with families. And I’m just sorry I didn’t see it. I’m just sorry I didn’t recognize it.” It just never in my wildest dreams that I think that this was happening right underneath me. And I never — the pain that people went through, the pain that people shared with me as this happened, the tears that I saw … It just — it hurt. And the way I felt is nothing compared to the way they felt. … I mean, I have to recognize I made a mistake, learn from it and then try to fix it. No. I don’t run away from my mistakes.”

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