Brooke Neville

Brooke Neville

Brooke Nevils, the previous NBC Newsmaker who blamed Matt Lauer for the assault, is hammering away his open letter denying his cases, calling it “a contextual investigation into an indictment of victims.”

Nevils reacted to Lauer’s extensive protection of her alleged unfortunate behaviour, which was defined in writer Ronan Farrow’s new book, Catch and Kill, in a statement to NBC News Wednesday night. In cutting-edge portions of the book, due out Oct. 15, Nevils claims that Lauer anally assaulted her while they were working at the Olympics Sochi in 2014.

“There is a Matt Lauer that a large number of Americans saw on television every day for twenty years. Also, there is the Matt Lauer who today went out of his way to threaten a former partner to shut up,” he said in his statement to NBC. News at night. “His open letter was a contextual analysis of the casualty allegations. I’m not afraid that he now pays little attention to his dangers, harassment and the dishonourable and ruthless strategies that I realized he would do, and now he has tried to use against me.”

Nevils and Lauer’s relationship continued after the alleged event, which she said was due to her fear of the Today show host’s previous control over her profession. Her complaint to NBC at the time led to Lauer’s termination from Today in 2017, but her character and the points of interest of her objection were kept under wraps until this week.

Lauer denied Nevil’s cases that her sexual experience was not consensual in a 1,400-word open letter received by Variety. “It is completely untrue, it ignores current realities and is opposed to the presence of mind,” the statement read. “I had an illicit extramarital affair with Brooke Nevils in 2014. It started when she came to my accommodation very late one night in Sochi, Russia. We engaged in a variety of sexual acts. We performed oral sex with each other, had vaginal sex, sex, and we had butt-focused sex. ”

She dealt with a problem with married Lauer from that moment on. However, the relationship ended. In 2017, she revealed it during the carving of #MeToo development, and it was her position that got him fired. Nevils had remained mysterious prior to the distribution of Farrow’s book.

Nevils said the sex in Sochi was not consensual. Lauer rejected that in his open letter, giving realistic niceties and other sexual experiences with Nevils, calling her a “willing accomplice.”