Russell Simmons is once again facing sexual assault allegations.
A former Def Jam video producer filed a complaint to New York Federal Court on Feb. 12, coming forward with claims of rape and sexual assault that took place back in the 1990s. The woman, who filed her complaint under “Jane Doe” to protect her identity, detailed the “devastating” experiences with the music mogul that led to her career being “derailed.” Doe alleged that she was raped in the late ’90s by Simmons at his Manhattan apartment when she visited him at his residence to receive approval for a video.
Russell Simmons has been named the perpetrator in a number of other sexual assault-related lawsuits in recent years. Since the 2017 allegations, multiple women have come forward recounting similar experiences with the Def Jam Records co-founder. Since then, he has maintained his innocence and also claimed to have passed “nine lie detector tests.”
He said in an episode of In Depth with Graham Bensinger at the time, “When someone said, for instance, ‘I was violent’ — one person said that — and I’ve never been violent. Took that. And one said I apologized. I never apologized about assaulting anyone. But if two people say it, because one said it, and #metoo, and the second person said it, then I took a test for it.”
See below for a full timeline of sexual assault allegations against Simmons, stemming back to November 2017, when the first of many victims came forward with claims of misconduct.
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November 19, 2017 – First Accusation
Weeks after Brooklyn Nine-Nine actor Terry Crews comes forward to claim an alleged assault at the hands of WME agent Adam Venit — who he claims grabbed his crotch on a red carpet event — Crews tweets that Simmons asked him to give Venit “a pass.”
That same day, the Los Angeles Times reports that Simmons and director Brett Ratner are accused of teaming up to allegedly sexually harass and assault women. One of the alleged victims, Keri Claussen Khalighi, claimed that when she was a 17-year-old fashion model she met then up-and-coming video director and Simmons protege Ratner at a casting call. After dinner one night in 1991, she said the pair took her back to Simmons’ apartment, ostensibly to show her a music video they had been working on, only to have Simmons make aggressive sexual advances on her and tear off her clothes.
“I looked over at Brett and said ‘help me’ and I’ll never forget the look on his face,” she told the newspaper. “In that moment, the realization fell on me that they were in it together.” Khalighi added that after Simmons tried to force her to have intercourse she “fought… wildly,” at which point the music mogul coerced her to perform oral sex, then briefly penetrating her without consent as she was taking a shower. Simmons strongly disputed Khalighi’s account in a statement claiming, “Everything that occurred between Keri and me occurred with her full consent and participation.”
Khalighi said that she encountered Simmons last year at an event where he delivered a “touching, remorseful apology” for his behavior. In a statement to the Times, Simmons said Khalighi’s claim “does a disservice to those who have been true victims of sexual harassment.” In statements obtained by the Times and the Hollywood Reporter Simmons also said, “Let me be crystal clear and very direct. Abusing women in any way shape or form violates the very core of my being,” adding “I completely and unequivocally deny the horrendous allegations of non-consensual sex against me with every fiber of my being.” Ratner has also disputed the allegations of sexual misconduct against him by at least 10 women.
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Nov. 22, 2017 – Simmons’ Statement
Simmons releases a statement to the Hollywood Reporter in reaction to Khalighi’s claims, alluding to his “longtime loathing of any form of violence and abuse,” saying that his relations with the model were consensual and that he has three witnesses and signed statements backing him up. “Humanity is going through a powerful and wrenching shift of consciousness that I believe will ultimately lead to a mass awakening in all humankind,” he wrote.
“Like all lasting change, this transition is filled with painful disruption and confrontation against an entrenched system. It may sound odd to some that I am encouraged about this time in our history, but I am. The daily news detailing the growing number of experiences of women being victimized are being brought to the light. I do not doubt that the vast majority of the allegations these brave survivors are sharing are true and dignified. I see their stories giving a voice to the voiceless, which has been the central theme of my life’s journey. I also know from recent painful personal experience that some recollections can be cast in a light away from the actual facts. My longtime loathing of any form of violence and abuse has been woven into all of my personal interactions, as most who know me will attest.”
Simmons added that in their meetings since the incident Khalighi never accused him or confronted him about that night and, in fact, “insisted I was not violent,” suggesting that the model was “ashamed” when her boyfriend and others “found out about our long weekend together.” He apologized for “the embarrassment she recounted to me,” adding “I have made choices that have offended some of the women in my life. It’s not cool to be a playboy and a new consciousness understands this. Now, as I hear these voices, I do as well. Though never abusive in any way, my remarks were often cavalier and thoughtless, and for this I am humbled. I am a work in progress. I am human. The fact that I come from the world of music or a specific place or generation justifies nothing.” Simmons said he would “never knowingly cause fear or harm to anyone. For any women from my past who I may have offended, I sincerely apologize. I am still evolving.”
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November 30, 2017 – Jenny Lumet’s Guest Column
A week after Simmons expressed support for the #MeToo movement in denying Khalighi’s allegations, writer Jenny Lumet pens a guest column for the Reporter entitled “Russell Simmons Sexually Violated Me.” In it, the Rachel Getting Married writer detailed Simmons’ years-long on and off pursuit of her that culminated in 1991 when the then-24 year-old writer when she accepted a ride home from him and was startled when he allegedly locked the doors of an SUV and would not let her out, then took her to his apartment where she said he raped her.
“I felt dread and disorientation. I wanted to go home. I said I wanted to go home,” she wrote. “I didn’t recognize the man next to me. I didn’t know if the situation would turn violent. I remember thinking that I must be crazy. I remember hoping that the Russell I knew would return any moment… There is so much guilt, and so much shame. There is an excruciating internal reckoning. As a woman of color, I cannot express how wrenching it is to write this about a successful man of color. Again, shame about who I was years ago, choices made years ago. In this very moment, I feel a pang to protect your daughters. I don’t think you are inclined to protect mine.”
The same day, Simmons announced that he was stepping down from his various businesses to “commit myself to continuing my personal growth, spiritual learning and above all listening,” noting that Lumet’s memory of that evening “is very different from mine” while acknowledging that her “feelings of fear and intimidation are real.” Simmons again denied ever having acted in a violent manner while apologizing for being “thoughtless and insensitive” in some of his relationships over the decades.
The same day, HBO announces that it is taking Simmons’s name off the All Def Comedy series and says he will not appear on the show going forward.
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December 13, 2017 – More Women Come Forward
The New York Times and Los Angeles Times report that four women have accused Simmons of rape in incidents spanning from 1983 to 1996, with five other women describing episodes of sexual misconduct, some as recently as 2016. The alleged incidents followed a similar pattern described in the earlier encounters, in which Simmons reportedly used his power and influence to assert his dominance over women and lure them into compromised situations where he sexually assaulted them.
The accusers included Sherri Hines of the all-female hip-hop group Mercedes Ladies, who said Simmons raped her in his office in 1983 when she was 17, former music journalist Toni Sallie, who said she casually dated Simmons after meeting him on assignment in 1987. Sallie described Simmons inviting her to a purported party in his apartment, where she said he raped her; a year later she said she had to physically fight off his advances at a hotel room during a music conference in Florida.
“I have accepted that I can and should get dirt on my sleeves if it means witnessing the birth of a new consciousness about women. What I will not accept is responsibility for what I have not done,” read Simmons’ statement to the New York Times about the latest accusations.. “I have conducted my life with a message of peace and love. Although I have been candid about how I have lived in books and interviews detailing my flaws, I will relentlessly fight against any untruthful character assassination that paints me as a man of violence.”
In addition, between the two newspaper’s reports, five other women alleged sexual misconduct ranging from attempts to force oral sex to using vulgar language during a 2016 business meeting with actress Amanda Seales to ask if they’d ever had sex. Simmons told the L.A. Times the new allegations range from “patently untrue to frivolous and hurtful claims,” reiterating that he has never been violent or abusive to any women “at any time in my entire life.”
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December 14, 2017 – NYPD Investigation
NYPD begins an investigation into the claims. The police, who are also involved in the investigation of sexual misconduct by Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein, are interviewing the women who came forward.
“The NYPD has received information regarding allegations involving Russell Simmons in the NYC area and our detectives are in the process of reviewing that information,” Sgt. Brendan Ryan told The Hollywood Reporter.
Simmons also deleted his Twitter account in the midst of the allegations, but kept his Instagram handle active. He took to the photo-sharing app to release a statement defending himself, and subsequently launching his own hashtag, #NotMe.
“Today, I begin to properly defend myself. I will prove without any doubt that I am innocent of all rape charges,” he wrote.
“My intention is not to diminish the #MeToo movement in anyway, but instead hold my accusers accountable. #NotMe Again, this is not a movement against or even in conjunction with #Metoo . It’s just a statement about my innocence,” he continued.
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January 24, 2018 – $5M Lawsuit
In documents filed with the United States District Court for the Central District of California, Jennifer Jarosik states that she befriended Simmons in New York city in 2006 over their shared “love and passion for meditation, yoga and a vegan diet” and trusted him due to his “reputation as a spiritual conscious person” and his promise to help her make her film.
When Jarosik was invited to Simmons Los Angeles house in 2016, she says, he asked to have sex to which she replied “no.” Simmons then allegedly got aggressive and pushed Jarosik onto his bed, causing her to hit her head as she tried to force him off of her. She claims Simmons then “pounced on her while she was still in shock and fear, and proceeded to rape her.”
Jarosik says she told only a few close friends about the incident and felt it was “partially her fault since she was not strong enough to resist.” But upon seeing multiple other women accuse Simmons of sexual harassment and rape, she contacted him — to which, according to the suit, he replied pretending it never happened.
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March 20, 2018: Simmons Speaks Out Again
“I don’t have a stitch of violence in me,” Simmons told TMZ. “I would never hurt anybody…I have never had any violence in me, but this is a difficult time for everyone.” He later hopped in his Range Rover and drove away, but not before planting some kisses on his date.
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April 25, 2018 – Jarosik’s Lawsuit Droppe
In his answer filed April 4, Simmons argued their sexual relationship was consensual and she often sent him texts saying she missed him and would love to see him. The parties went on to file a joint stipulation of dismissal with prejudice.
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July 10, 2018 – Another Woman Comes Forward
Alexia Norton Jones, granddaughter of late book publisher W.W. Norton and daughter of Martin Luther King Jr. attorney/speechwriter Clarence Jones, claims in an interview with Variety that at the end of a date with Simmons in November 1990, the Def Jam Recordings co-founder invited her to see his new Manhattan apartment, where she claims he then pinned her against a wall and raped her.
“It was such a fast attack. He pulled my dress up. I must have said ‘no’ seven to 10 times,” she told Variety. After leaving the apartment upset and in shock, Jones, then a 31-year-old aspiring model and actress, said that Simmons kept calling her and pursuing her at social events; Simmons was reportedly friendly with Jones’ father. Though she said she forgave Simmons after several years, Jones, who now lives in Arizona, filed a police report with the NYPD in the spring.
The incident is outside the statute of limitations for felony prosecution in New York, but Jones said she decided to file in order to stand in solidarity with the more than a dozen women who have accused Simmons of sexual assault or rape to date. Simmons has denied all the allegations and stepped away from the daily management of his companies. The onetime CEO of Rush Communications issued a statement to Billboard denying Jones’ assault claims.
“I have respectfully, factually and comprehensively denied the charges of sexual violence against me,” he said. “From the very first allegation in October, I have provided statements of witnesses who testified to my innocence some thirty years ago. Most witnesses from years back were and remain afraid for their standing, their families and their professions. It is certainly true that there were and remain hurdles to calling out abusers. I have said from day one that I support and advocate truth telling and holding abusers fully to account.”
In a separate statement to Variety, Simmons said he was “deeply saddened by this story from Alexia,” adding that she had never shared her feelings about their first sexual encounter with him and noting that he has taken multiple lie detector tests to affirm that he has never sexually assaulted anyone. Further, he said the two dated, were intimate, attended a number of events together after the alleged 1990 incident and that he considered her a friend for all these years. He said they last spoke in 2006 when she “called to express her disappointment over the fact that I had not attended an event honoring her father.”
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November 16, 2020 – Simmons Beats $10M Lawsuit
Russell Simmons defeated a lawsuit from a Jane Doe who accused him of rape because the complaint was filed at least four years too late.
The woman filed a $10 million suit in March 2018 alleging sexual battery and intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress. The prolific music producer denied her claims and called them a “vile” extortion attempt.
L.A. Superior Court judge Mark H. Epstein on Nov. 13 entered judgment in favor of Simmons, after granting his motion for summary judgment on the grounds that Doe’s claims stemmed from an alleged incident in 1988 and were time-barred. Epstein had denied Simmons’ previous motion for summary judgment because his argument that Doe’s suit was barred by the statute of limitations was based on information obtained in an email that was sent during settlement negotiations. Simmons’ lawyers at Glaser Weil renewed the motion after obtaining admissible evidence.
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December 6, 2023 – Simmons Claims He Passed Nine Lie Detector Tests
In an episode of In Depth with Graham Bensinger, Simmons denied any violent allegations against him. “I took nine lie detector tests, people don’t know that,” he said. “Nine separate — seven from the Chairman of the Polygraph Association. One for each and serious accusation.”
He continued, “When someone said, for instance, ‘I was violent’ — one person said that — and I’ve never been violent. Took that. And one said I apologized. I never apologized about assaulting anyone. But if two people say it, because one said it, and #metoo, and the second person said it, then I took a test for it.”
Watch the full episode here.
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February 13, 2024 – More Allegations
Simmons was sued by a former Def Jam video producer over claims of rape and sexual assault that took place in the 1990s.
Billboard obtained the complaint filed to New York Federal Court on Tuesday (Feb. 12), which was filed under “Jane Doe” to protect the victim’s identity. She detailed the “devastating” experiences with the music mogul that led to her career being “derailed.”
Doe alleged that she was raped in the late ’90s by Simmons at his Manhattan apartment when she visited him at his residence to receive approval for a video. While in his bedroom, she claimed that Simmons pinned her down with a “wrestling” move and proceeded to rape her despite her repeatedly professing her desire for him to stop his unwanted sexual advances.
Ms. Doe tried to continue her executive job at Def Jam but she suffered alleged panic attacks and developed an eating disorder and eventually moved across the country to California seeking new opportunities in 1997. She left three jobs throughout the two-year period following the alleged sexual assault at the hands of Simmons in part due to her crippling anxiety.