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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Business
Sam Dean

Accused of sexual assault, former Tinder CEO files defamation lawsuit

In August, a former vice president at Tinder filed a lawsuit alleging that Greg Blatt, the onetime chief executive of Tinder and its parent companies Match Group and IAC, sexually harassed and assaulted her at a company Christmas party in 2016.

On Thursday, Blatt filed a defamation suit against his accuser, Rosette Pambakian, and against Tinder's co-founder and former CEO Sean Rad, alleging that the sexual battery accusations are part of a smear campaign designed to give Rad and Pambakian leverage in a separate multibillion-dollar legal battle over the value of Tinder stock.

"Rad and Pambakian have attempted to weaponize an important social movement," the defamation suit alleges, "undermining the plight of true victims of sexual abuse by making false accusations in cynical pursuit of a $2 billion windfall."

Orin Snyder, an attorney for Pambakian and Rad, called Blatt's suit "a new low for IAC/Match and their former CEO. They continue to retaliate against and smear a victim of sexual assault and the person who reported it. Their attacks are based on lies and documents that are taken out of context. When all of the evidence comes to light, it will be obvious what happened here. It's shameful that these public companies are continuing to cover-up the truth."

A spokeswoman for the Match Group said neither the company nor its parent is a party to Blatt's suit.

Pambakian's August suit painted a picture of a drunken Blatt making unwanted advances over the course of the party at the SLS Hotel in Bevery Hills, culminating in an incident in a hotel room, with other Tinder employees present, in which Blatt allegedly pinned Pambakian to a bed and began "forcibly groping (Pambakian's) breasts and upper thighs, and kissing her shoulders, neck and chest."

Blatt's defamation suit, filed in U.S. District Courtin California, presents a different account of that evening. According to Blatt, he and Pambakian flirted over the course of the party, culminating in a consensual kiss in a hotel room. The suit argues that Blatt and Pambakian had had a close and mutually admiring relationship both before and after the holiday party, saying "a flurry of friendly messages exchanged the next morning between Pambakian and Blatt in which they joked about their hangovers belie Pambakian's assertion that she believed she had been assaulted by Blatt just hours earlier."

Noting that Pambakian herself never formally reported the incident, the suit alleges it only came to light thanks to the efforts of Rad, and only after negotiations over the valuation of Rad's Tinder stock options fell apart. Rad reported it to company officials a week after telling his financial advisor, in an email about Blatt: "We are at war. We will destroy him," according to Blatt's suit.

An internal investigation following Rad's formal complaint found that Blatt had not violated the law or company policy. According to Blatt's suit, "(t)he Board did, however, agree with Blatt that he had exercised poor judgment. As a result, the Board determined that an appropriate reprimand was to cancel an option grant Blatt had been scheduled to receive in early May worth millions of dollars. Blatt accepted his punishment without objection." Blatt left the company at the end of 2017.

As evidence that Pambakian had a financial motive for misrepresenting the incident, Blatt's suit points to an unusual litigation financing agreement between her and Rad which guaranteed her a multimillion-dollar payment in exchange for participating in the lawsuit over the valuation of Tinder and including her harassment claim in that suit. Blatt alleges this agreement was Rad's strategy for damaging his credibility as a witness in the valuation case.

"In essence, Rad was willing to pay Pambakian out of his own pocket in order to convince her to join the Valuation Lawsuit," Blatt's complaint says. "This arrangement only made sense from Rad's perspective if he believed that Pambakian's participation would increase his chance of victory in the suit."

Blatt's defamation suit joins a flurry of legal actions surrounding Tinder's corporate practices, none of which involve current employees or managers at the popular dating app company or its owners, though several target the company itself.

In the central $2-billion lawsuit against the company, which is working its way through the court system in New York state, Tinder co-founder Rad and a number of former Tinder executives claim that IAC and its dating app subsidiary Match Group (which also owns Hinge and OkCupid) purposely undervalued the company in an effort to avoid paying out billions in stock options to the original team that developed the swipe-to-match dating app.

Pambakian initially made her sexual battery claims against Blatt public last year as part of that larger suit, but withdrew after finding that she had signed an arbitration agreement with the company. Tinder fired her in December _ the standalone suit against Blatt and the company that Pambakian filed in August alleges, in addition to the sexual battery and harassment, that her firing was retaliation for her participation in the stock pricing suit.

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