Woman Claims After She Rebuffed Roger Ailes, She Was ‘Blacklisted’
"I had my career taken away from me," she said in an interview with Fortune. · Fortune

Since Gretchen Carlson, former Fox News host, filed an explosive sexual-harassment lawsuit against company founder, chairman, and CEO Roger Ailes, other women have come forward. New York magazine’s Gabriel Sherman detailed six women’s alleged encounters that they claim took place from the 1960s to 1989. Two allowed their full names to be used.

Kellie Boyle is one of these women. The co-founder of a Virginia-based communications firm that she runs with her husband, Boyle said she met Ailes in 1989 as a young, up-and-coming Republican political communications consultant. A legendary media consultant, Ailes had done work for republican presidents Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush. She was in awe of him. “He was powerful and brilliant,” said Boyle. “I had read his book, You Are the Message, and I quoted it often when I was training candidates.”

But in an interview with Fortune, she said that the few hours she spent with Roger Ailes--which included a sexual proposition, rebuffed, followed by loss of a big contract--was deeply scarring, and left her adrift emotionally and professionally. “I was really lost for a few years,” Boyle said. “I had my career taken away from me.”

Roger Ailes and his representatives have denied all sexual harassment allegations, and some prominent female Fox journalists, including Greta Van Susteren and Maria Bartiromo, have spoken out in defense of their boss. Ailes’ attorney, Barry Asen, released a statement (with links), saying, “It has become obvious that Ms. Carlson and her lawyer are desperately attempting to litigate this in the press because they have no legal case to argue. The latest allegations, all 30 to 50 years old, are false.”

Below is an edited transcript of Fortune’s interview with Kellie Boyle.

How she met Roger Ailes

In 1989, I was starting my political communications business. And by chance, Roger Ailes happened to be interviewed by CNBC, where my husband worked, and he said do you want to meet him? I was a big fan. He was somebody I admired. It was an opportunity to meet him. That was brief. Roger Ailes invited me to his downtown office in NY to see his operation, meet some people, because he could tell I was a fan. That meeting lasted 30 minutes. He showed me around. He told me, “We get pieces of business too small for us to handle. Maybe we could hand it off to you.”

I told him I was going to DC for this career-making contract with the National Republican Congressional Committee that I had been working on for a long time. I was going to sign the contract and get my assignments. He said he was going to be in DC. Did I want to have dinner? The dinner was purely professional. I asked him about his work and heard his war stories.