Clothing retailer Abercrombie & Fitch Co. has launched an investigation into claims that its former CEO Mike Jeffries sexually exploited men at lavish parties hosted around the world.
The accusations, which were first reported by the BBC, place Jeffries at the helm of several sex events organized by a middleman who recruited participants with the prospect of becoming a model for what was once one of America's top teen outfitters.
Here's an overview of what we know.
The BBC says it spoke with eight men who engaged in or witnessed sex acts at parties hosted by Jeffries and his partner, Matthew Smith, from the years 2009 to 2015. Each of the men was paid thousands of dollars in cash after the parties, the BBC reported.
The recruitment for the events was handled by the middleman, identified by the BBC as James Jacobson.
One of the recruits told the BBC that Jacobson "made it clear to me that unless I let him perform oral sex on me, that I would not be meeting with Abercrombie & Fitch or Mike Jeffries."
The man performed the act, receiving first $500 in payment from Jacobson, and, later, an invitation to Jeffries' then-home in the Hamptons. There, the man was given poppers — a type of drug commonly used to enhance sexual experiences — and eventually had sex with the then-CEO.
Another man, a former model, told the BBC he had oral sex performed on him by another recruited man as Jeffries and Smith watched.
"This experience, I think it broke me," the former model told the BBC. "I think that this stole any ounce of innocence that I had left. It mentally messed me up. But with the language I now have today, I can sit here and tell you that I was taken advantage of."
NPR called several phone numbers listed for Jeffries in public databases but could not successfully reach the former CEO to request comment.
Jeffries headed A&F from 1992 and 2014 and is credited with transforming the store from a flailing heritage brand known for safari wear to a top-selling teen outfitter synonymous with preppy cuts, pungent cologne and provocative ads with semi-nude models.
From the start, Jeffries had a clear, if elitist, vision for what the store could be.
"In every school there are the cool and popular kids, and there are the not-so-cool kids. Candidly, we go after the cool kids. We go after the attractive, all-American kid with a great attitude and a lot of friends," he said in a 2006 interview with Salon.
"A lot of people don't belong [in our clothes] and they can't belong. Are we exclusionary? Absolutely."
That attitude struck success as a business strategy. By 2006, earnings had increased for 52 straight quarters, with annual profits topping $2 billion. The company had opened 800 brick-and-mortar stores and owned three additional brands, including Hollister, the wildly popular purveyor of beach-inspired looks.
But the marketing approach that made A&F into a financial success also made it an HR nightmare.
In 2003, Black, Latino and Asian American employees filed a class action lawsuit against the company claiming that minority applicants were discouraged from applying or kept out of the public eye in undesirable positions. The company settled in 2004 for $40 million.
Jeffries stepped down a decade later, in 2014, as sales began to decline. He received a retirement package of $25 million, according to the BBC.
As a sign of how far the brand was willing to go to protect the ideals he instilled, A&F lawyers appeared before the Supreme Court the following year, arguing they were right to deny a Muslim woman a job because her headscarf violated its "look policy." The Supreme Court ruled against the company 8-1.
A&F carried its exclusionary reputation into America's era of racial reckoning, prompting media takedowns like the 2022 Netflix documentary White Hot: The Rise & Fall of Abercrombie and Fitch.
But somewhere alongside this reckoning — maybe even because of it — A&F started to remake its image. The brand has shed its iconic dark-shuttered storefronts, moose logos and sexualized billboard spots. It expanded its size offerings and started marketing with the help of 20-something influencers, who praise its basics like bodysuits and trousers.
"We are a positive, inclusive brand, with a nice sensibility, very different from what they encountered in the past," said the new chief merchandising officer, Fran Horowitz, in 2016.
Media outlets took notice this year, starting to call it a "rebound," a "rebrand" and a "major revival" moment. Now that nascent comeback is facing its first major test.
As the BBC's investigation aired on Monday, the company shared a statement on its social media channels saying it had hired an outside law firm to conduct an independent investigation.
"The company's current executive leadership team and board of directors were not aware of the allegations of sexual misconduct by Mr. Jeffries," the statement adds. "We have zero tolerance for abuse, harassment or discrimination of any kind."
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