CEO famed for higher pay advocacy exits after sexual assault allegations
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Dan
Price was the poster child for resisting corporate greed, making
headlines in 2015 for setting a minimum
$70,000 salary for all employees at the payments company he led
— saying he cut his own salary as CEO by 90% to achieve it.
On
Wednesday, amid allegations of misconduct and sexual assault including several
criminal charges, he resigned from the company he founded in college.
Price's
exit from Gravity Payments comes with the publication of a bombshell New
York Times report that alleged Price used his social media
platforms to create a reputation as an advocate for higher pay in an effort to
mask "a pattern of abuse in his personal life and hostile behavior at his
company."
A
27-year-old model and artist told the Times she and Price had a three-month
romance in early 2021 that ended, she alleged, when Price raped her. Price, 38,
has denied the allegations, while police in Palm Springs, Calif., told the
Times that they had referred the case to local prosecutors, recommending a
charge of rape of a drugged victim.
The
Times detailed allegations of physical and sexual abuse spanning a decade from
five other women, including four who spoke on the record. In a statement posted
to his Twitter account Wednesday, Price said he was leaving Gravity Payments to
"focus full-time on fighting false accusations made against me."
Neither Price nor Gravity Payments responded to CNN Business' requests for
comment.
Price
also tweeted another statement on Wednesday detailing the benefits and perks he
has provided to his employees, like unlimited paid time off and 401(k) match
programs.
Previous
abuse allegations
The
Times story alleged that Price was actively pursuing women online "who say
he hurt them, both physically and emotionally," while tweeting messages
like "A male president was so angry he lost that he incited a mob against
the U.S. Capitol. I never want to hear again that women would be 'too
emotional' to be president."
It's
not the first time Price has been accused of abuse. Earlier this year he was
charged with fourth-degree assault and reckless driving in Seattle after
prosecutors said he forcibly kissed a woman after a dinner meeting and then
drove her to a parking lot where he attempted dangerous car stunts while she
was inside the vehicle. Price has pleaded not guilty to the charges and awaits
trial in October, according to The Seattle
Times.
In
2015, the same year he rose to prominence, Price's ex-wife Kristie Colón said
in a TEDx Talk recorded at the University of Kentucky that her ex-husband had
beaten and waterboarded her, as the New York Times piece notes. Price has also
denied those allegations.
In
the end, it may not even have been Price who was advocating for his employees
and women on Twitter. The New York Times reports he hired a ghostwriter, Mike
Rosenberg, a former real estate writer, to write much of his social media
content.
Rosenberg
himself resigned from The Seattle Times in 2019 after he was accused of sending
sexually explicit messages. Rosenberg told a reporter for the news site Crosscut that
the messages were not intended for the person who received them, and he did not
respond to CNN Business' requests for comment.


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