Tech

Shareholders sue Activision Blizzard for withholding harassment info

Photoshopped image from a video game shows a person in an Activision Blizzsard hoodie confronted barrels filled, presumably, with gasoline.

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In a proposed class-action lawsuit, Activision Blizzard shareholders argue that they were “economically damaged” by company executives withholding information and allegations that have recently come to light through a California Department of Fair Employment and Housing discrimination and harassment lawsuit against the company.

The Class Action Complaint, filed in a California Federal Court by the Rosen law firm, specifically names CEO Bobby Kotick, current CFO Dennis Durkin, and former CFO Spencer Neumann. Those executives and others were “aware of or recklessly disregarded the fact that the false and misleading statements were being issued concerning the Company,” according to the complaint.

To support that claim, the lawsuit cites multiple SEC filings Activision Blizzard made from mid-2016 onward. Those filings included boilerplate language regarding the risks to the business imposed by various legal matters, and they conclude with the sentence “such routine claims and lawsuits are not significant and we do not expect them to have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations, or liquidity.”

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