Abercrombie,
Pushing a New Image, Confronts Accusations Against Ex-C.E.O.
Recent sex
trafficking charges against Michael Jeffries could entangle the retailer, too,
as it tries to close a tumultuous chapter in its history.
On Tuesday,
federal prosecutors charged Michael Jeffries, center, the former longtime chief
executive of Abercrombie, with running a sex trafficking scheme from at least
2008 to 2015, while he was at the helm of the company.
Danielle
Kaye
By Danielle
Kaye
Oct. 25,
2024
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/25/business/abercrombie-mike-jeffries-sex-trafficking-charges.html
Fran
Horowitz, the chief executive of Abercrombie & Fitch, said it plainly: “We
are no longer the company that we used to be.”
That was in
2017, and Ms. Horowitz was referring to a series of crises that had tainted the
clothing retailer during the tenure of her predecessor, Michael S. Jeffries,
who had led the company from 1992 to 2014. There were lawsuits accusing
Abercrombie of discriminating against Black, Latino and Asian employees;
blowback for selling sexualized clothing to children; and accusations that its
marketing to “the attractive all-American kid” excluded potential customers
based on weight.
Under Mr.
Jeffries, Abercrombie’s stores emulated nightclubs, with dimmed lighting and
images of half-naked young models lining the walls.
Ms. Horowitz
took the helm in 2017 and revamped the brand’s image. Its stores are brighter,
its models are fully clothed and its stock has soared, bolstered by customers’
embrace of the expanded product offerings.
For a time,
Mr. Jeffries’s legacy seemed to be a dark period that would stay in the past.
But new accusations against him, more serious this time around, have come to
light. They have threatened Abercrombie’s revamp of its image and could put the
company at financial risk.
On Tuesday,
federal prosecutors charged Mr. Jeffries, 80, with running a sex trafficking
scheme from at least 2008 to 2015, while he was at the helm of the company,
coercing young men to attend events around the world where he and his romantic
partner sexually exploited them. The indictment echoed allegations that were
first unearthed last year by a BBC investigation and a lawsuit accusing Mr.
Jeffries of using the prospect of modeling jobs at Abercrombie to abuse dozens
of men.
He was
arrested this week in Florida and pleaded not guilty to all the charges on
Friday, during his arraignment at a federal courthouse on Long Island. He was
released on a $10 million bond with home confinement.
The company
has denied any involvement in or knowledge of Mr. Jeffries’s activities.
“Abercrombie
& Fitch Company’s current executive leadership team and board of directors
were not aware of the allegations of sexual misconduct by Mr. Jeffries,” said
Kate Wagner, a spokeswoman for the company.
She said
that the company was “appalled and disgusted” by the allegations, and that
Abercrombie had “successfully transformed our brands and culture into the
values-driven organization we are today.”
The federal
charges against Mr. Jeffries and two others — Matthew Smith, 61, his romantic
partner, and James Jacobson, 71, whom prosecutors accused of acting as a
recruiter in the sex trafficking scheme and who also pleaded not guilty — do
not explicitly implicate the company. Prosecutors do not have evidence that the
alleged crimes happened on company grounds, Breon S. Peace, the U.S. attorney
for the Eastern District of New York, said at a news conference on Tuesday
while announcing the indictment. And prosecutors have not said company
resources were involved.
But the
lawsuit filed in October 2023, on behalf of dozens of men who said they were
victims of Mr. Jeffries’s sexual exploitation, named Abercrombie as a
defendant. According to the complaint, the company not only knew about Mr.
Jeffries’s alleged sex trafficking scheme, but also financed events where the
alleged sex abuse took place. The defendants in the case moved this month to
dismiss it.
“The thing
that you’re going to be looking for is knowledge,” said Kenya Davis, a partner
at Boies Schiller Flexner and former federal prosecutor. “It will really rise
and fall on how much the company knew, and how much the company let this guy do
whatever he wanted to do.”
The suit
makes alarming claims: A video depicting Mr. Jeffries sniffing what appeared to
be cocaine off a man’s private body part circulated within the Abercrombie
office, but the company did not take action; for several years, Mr. Jeffries
was permitted to pay hush money to victims using Abercrombie funds; and in
2010, one model who had been recruited to meet with Mr. Jeffries was given
company gift cards to buy Abercrombie clothes.
“Without
Abercrombie’s knowing participation, the sex trafficking scheme could not have
existed and flourished,” the suit said.
Ms. Wagner,
Abercrombie’s spokeswoman, declined to comment on the allegations in the suit
because it was pending litigation. Last year, the company hired a law firm to
investigate the accusations against Mr. Jeffries, though the company has not
updated the status of that investigation.
Elizabeth
Fegan, a partner at FeganScott who has represented sexual abuse survivors in
high-profile cases including trials against Harvey Weinstein, said there was
“fairly abundant” evidence that the company and its former board of directors
had abdicated their responsibility to the victims. The board very likely knew,
or should have known, about the nefarious activity, she said, adding that
juries were more willing, in the post-“Me Too” era, to impose punitive damages
on those who enabled or protected perpetrators.
But finding
corporate liability for Mr. Jeffries’s alleged sex trafficking scheme could be
a challenge, lawyers said. Typically, it is not enough to prove that a business
has heard rumors about or may have been aware of bad conduct, said Amanda
Kramer, a partner at Covington and former federal prosecutor. Liability often
comes down to the amount and nature of the knowledge, she said.
“There has
to be an involvement, and a knowing financial benefit,” Ms. Kramer said. “The
way courts seem to be going is requiring more than just passive awareness and
general business dealing with a person.”
The fact
that some of the claims have been made by people who were not working for
Abercrombie could be an additional challenge for plaintiffs aiming to hold the
company to account, Ms. Kramer said. The standard for corporate liability is
“quite different” for conduct perpetrated against an employee or in the
workplace, she added.
Abercrombie’s
strongest defense against liability would be to argue that Mr. Jeffries was
acting outside his role at the company, said Heather Cucolo, a professor at New
York Law School. But that could be a hurdle for Abercrombie, she said, because
the civil suit seemed to indicate a significant connection between the alleged
acts and Mr. Jeffries’s position as chief executive.
Ms. Cucolo
pointed to a decision this year by a judge in Delaware ordering Abercrombie to
pay for Mr. Jeffries’s legal fees in the lawsuit, on the basis that the
allegations in the case were tied to his role at the company.
The
heightened attention to Mr. Jeffries’s conduct comes as Abercrombie has
continued to overhaul its public image — largely successfully — to lure back
customers wary of buying clothes from a brand tainted by scandals. When Mr.
Jeffries resigned from Abercrombie in 2014, he left the company with sluggish
sales amid discrimination lawsuits and public backlash to its hypersexualized
branding. Abercrombie’s sales and stock price were dropping sharply at the
time.
But in the
last fiscal year, the retailer brought in more than $4 billion in revenue, a
level not reached in more than a decade.
Investors
have liked the turnaround: Abercrombie’s share price rose 285 percent last
year.
It remains
to be seen if the new charges against Mr. Jeffries will hurt the retailer in
the same way. Both the federal indictment and the civil suit could drag on for
months, if not years, adding to public scrutiny of the company.
But many
customers have become desensitized to allegations of sexual misconduct against
people in power, said Shawn Grain Carter, a professor of fashion business
management at the Fashion Institute of Technology. Even if they find the
allegations reprehensible, they’re likely to keep shopping at Abercrombie,
especially as Ms. Horowitz has pushed the retailer to expand its offerings and
focus on inclusivity, a sharp departure from Mr. Jeffries’s exclusionary
rhetoric, she said.
The
accusations and charges against Mr. Jeffries are “not going to affect this
brand at all,” Ms. Carter added, saying that “the customer is going to continue
to support the brand because they’ll say, ‘This guy has been out of there for
10 years.’”
Abercrombie’s
stock has fallen more than 11 percent since Mr. Jeffries’s arrest.
The company
will have to do everything it can to distance itself from its former chief
executive, stressing to the public that much of the leadership at the company —
including the entire board of directors — has changed since Mr. Jeffries’s
tenure, said Erik Gordon, a professor at the Ross School of Business at the
University of Michigan. Two current senior executives, the chief financial
officer and the head of human resources, worked at Abercrombie during Mr.
Jeffries’s tenure, though both were in lower-level roles.
But beyond
potential legal liability, there could be a bumpy road ahead for Abercrombie’s
business, Mr. Gordon said, given the severity of the allegations against its
former longtime leader. The public scrutiny could set the company back in its
push to rebrand and “calls the brand’s identity into question,” he said.
Sean Piccoli
contributed reporting.
Danielle
Kaye is a business reporter and a 2024 David Carr Fellow, a program for
journalists early in their careers. More about Danielle Kaye
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