Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Peter Nygard Steps Down From Company Following Sex Assault Claims

The Canadian Press, 26 Feb, 2020 08:29 PM

    NEW YORK - Canadian fashion mogul Peter Nygard is stepping down as chairman of his company following an FBI raid on his Manhattan headquarters over sex assault allegations.

     

    "Recognizing the priority of the welfare of the thousands of Nygard employees, retail partners, loyal customers, vendors, suppliers and business partners, Peter Nygard has made the decision to step down as Chairman of the Nygard Companies and will divest his ownership interest," Ken Frydman, Nygard's spokesman, said in an email Tuesday night.

     

    The FBI searched the designer's Times Square offices Tuesday, less than two weeks after 10 women filed a lawsuit accusing Nygard of enticing young and impoverished women to his estate in the Bahamas with cash and promises of modelling opportunities.

     

    Several plaintiffs in the suit said they were 14 or 15 years old when Nygard gave them alcohol or drugs and then raped them.

     

    Nygard has denied the sex-trafficking claims through his spokesman.

     

    "Nygard welcomes the federal investigation and expects his name to be cleared. He has not been charged, is not in custody and is co-operating with the investigation," Frydman said.

     

    Nygard International began in Winnipeg as a sportswear manufacturer. The company website says its retail division has more than 170 stores in North America.

     

    The class-action lawsuit says Nygard used his company, bribery of Bahamian officials and "considerable influence in the fashion industry" to recruit victims in the Bahamas, United States and Canada.

     

    It alleges he plied the young women with drugs and alcohol during "pamper parties" and kept a database on a corporate server containing the names of thousands of potential victims.

     

    Nygard's victims would have their passports taken from them when they were flown into the Bahamas, the lawsuit alleges, adding the designer "expected a sex act before he was willing to consider releasing any person" from his estate.

     

    Frydman said authorities also executed a "search and seizure" on Nygard's offices in California.

     

    He blamed the raids on a "conspiracy" involving Louis Bacon, the billionaire hedge fund manager who owns an estate next door to Nygard's in the Bahamas.

     

    "After being viciously and maliciously attacked for over a decade by Louis Bacon and his operatives, which has included millions of dollars in payoffs to women and others to make false claims against him, Peter Nygard has decided that his legal battles with Louis Bacon will no longer be a distraction to the Companies," Frydman said.

     

    "Peter Nygard thanks his employees for their years of dedicated service."

     

    A spokesman for Bacon declined to comment.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Premiers Bound For Washington To Celebrate USMCA, Beat Back Protectionism

    Premiers Bound For Washington To Celebrate USMCA, Beat Back Protectionism
    WASHINGTON - A delegation of premiers will be in Washington this weekend to buttress cross-border business ties with their American counterparts, hedging their bets at the dawn of a new and uncertain era of managed North American trade.    

    Premiers Bound For Washington To Celebrate USMCA, Beat Back Protectionism

    Man Accused Of Abducting Toddler In 1987 Returns To Canada To Face Charge

    Man Accused Of Abducting Toddler In 1987 Returns To Canada To Face Charge
    Allan Mann Jr. has been charged with abduction for allegedly kidnapping his son Jermaine in 1987, Toronto police said.    

    Man Accused Of Abducting Toddler In 1987 Returns To Canada To Face Charge

    Privacy Czar Asks Court To Declare Facebook Broke Law Governing Personal Info

    Privacy Czar Asks Court To Declare Facebook Broke Law Governing Personal Info
    OTTAWA - The federal privacy czar is asking a judge to declare that Facebook broke Canada's law governing how the private sector can use personal information.

    Privacy Czar Asks Court To Declare Facebook Broke Law Governing Personal Info

    Police Had No Right To Seize Hidden Bedside Camera From Airbnb Condo, Judge Says

    Police Had No Right To Seize Hidden Bedside Camera From Airbnb Condo, Judge Says
    TORONTO - A police officer had no right to enter a condo rented to an Airbnb guest who found a video camera hidden in a clock pointed at the bed, an Ontario judge has ruled.    

    Police Had No Right To Seize Hidden Bedside Camera From Airbnb Condo, Judge Says

    Top Ontario Health Official Says Coronavirus Surveillance Is Widening

    TORONTO - Monitoring for the novel coronavirus in Canada will now shift into a new phase, focusing on people returning from areas of China that haven't been quarantined, top provincial and federal medical officials said Thursday.    

    Top Ontario Health Official Says Coronavirus Surveillance Is Widening

    Slow Down Ordered After Second Train Carrying Oil Derails Near Saskatchewan Town

    Slow Down Ordered After Second Train Carrying Oil Derails Near Saskatchewan Town
    GUERNSEY, Sask. - The federal government ordered lower speed limits for all trains carrying large amounts of dangerous goods Thursday, hours after a fiery derailment in rural Saskatchewan sent thick black smoke into the air.    

    Slow Down Ordered After Second Train Carrying Oil Derails Near Saskatchewan Town