Handled in house at the time.
By "handled in house", you mean swept under the rug.
Got it.
Now write, 100 times, "I will not get caught harassing female employees again."
Employee was disciplined and went to counseling
This harrassment of women in the Mets organization has a long history.
In 1998, Mets GM Steve Phillips admitted having sex with a Mets employee. She sued for sexual harassment, and the case was settled out of court.
Mickey Calloway. Ryan Ellis.
And you may remember this, too:
https://slate.com/culture/2020/01/mets-rape-accusation-spring-training-1991.html And what about this? Wilpons had to settle a case out of court for gender discrimination.
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/14/sports/baseball/mets-settle-case-with-executive-who-cited-discrimination-over-pregnancy.htmlThere is something in the Mets "culture" that leads to this kind of thing, it seems.
But maybe Steve Cohen isn't the one to lead such change:
In the months since Steven A. Cohen became the owner of the Mets, he has been everything he never was as one of Wall Street’s most secretive money managers: affable and accessible.
Mr. Cohen has given news conferences and numerous interviews to the New York sports media — something he rarely did with the business reporters who chronicled every twist and turn in an insider trading scandal that led to one of his multibillion-dollar hedge funds pleading guilty to securities fraud charges in 2013.
And he has become something of a fan favorite on Twitter — frequently posting his thoughts on the Mets and about trades by other professional baseball teams. Mr. Cohen, 64, even seems to take joy in the back and forth with fans who have replied to him on Twitter.
But at his hedge funds, Mr. Cohen has long been known for a mercurial nature that has prompted him to lash out at traders he believes are not making him enough money. Now a recently unsealed gender discrimination complaint filed by a former top manager for Mr. Cohen offers a glimpse into his volatile temper and what some women have said is an openly sexist and hostile culture at his Point72 Asset Management hedge fund company, which is based in Stamford, Conn.https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/05/sports/baseball/steven-cohen-mets-gender-discrimination.htmlFathers, don't let your daughters grow up to be Mets Fans. And especially not employees of the Mets.