Skip to main content

Blizzard Activision execs subpoenaed by SEC over handling of abuse allegations

A report from the Washington Post has revealed that Activision Blizzard’s woes stemming from a lawsuit filed against the company by the State of California are far from over. According to the report, the company is currently the focus of an investigation by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) over its handling of sexual misconduct and abuse allegations. The investigation has led to Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick, along with other high-ranking executives at the company, being subpoenaed.

According to the report, the SEC’s focus is on finding out whether Activision Blizzard shared information about accusations of workplace discrimination and sexual harassment with “investors and other parties.” To that end, the SEC has requested a vast number of documents from the company, including personnel files, separation agreements, meeting minutes reaching back to 2019, and Kotick’s communications with other executives regarding sexual harassment complaints at the company.

The SEC’s involvement, asan arm of the federal government, significantly steps up the pressure being put on the Call of Duty and World of Warcraft publisher since a lawsuit was filed against it by the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing in July. The suit alleges that women at the company were sexually harassed and regularly paid less than their male counterparts, most commonly at Blizzard Entertainment. Since the lawsuit, employees at Blizzard have walked out and the company’s president, J. Allen Brack, has stepped down.

Activision Blizzard’s immediate response to the SEC has been civil, with a representative for the company saying that it “is cooperating with the SEC.” Activision Blizzard’s first response to the California lawsuit was nearly the opposite, with the company saying that it included “distorted” information. However, Kotick walked those comments back soon after, saying they were “tone-deaf.”

Editors' Recommendations

Otto Kratky
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Otto Kratky is a freelance writer with many homes. You can find his work at Digital Trends, GameSpot, and Gamepur. If he's…
Microsoft’s Activision Blizzard acquisition just hit another hurdle in the U.K.
Phil Spencer standing in front of a Microsoft Studios logo.

Microsoft's nearly $70 billion acquisition of Activision Blizzard is under review internationally, and no country takes this matter more seriously than the United Kingdom. The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) completed the first phase of its investigation into the deal and is now recommending putting it through a second phase.

The call for extra scrutiny into the deal between Microsoft and Activision Blizzard stems from the CMA's concern that such a deal may substantially stifle competition in the U.K.'s gaming market. Specifically, it's worried that if and when the merger goes through, Microsoft may make Activision Blizzard's portfolio of games exclusive to Xbox consoles, or make them available on PlayStation and Nintendo systems "on worse terms." It's also concerned that the company may leverage Activision Blizzard's games across console, PC, and cloud systems to harm competition in the growing cloud gaming space.

Read more
Blizzard and NetEase reportedly cancel a Warcraft mobile MMO
Orc and human facing off for Warcraft promo art.

A Warcraft mobile MMO from Blizzard and NetEase is reportedly canceled after three years of development.

This spinoff project, codenamed Neptune, was a mobile MMO World of Warcraft spin-off that took place during a different time period. Blizzard and NetEase scrapped it due to an unspecified financial disagreement This news comes by way of a Bloomberg report, citing people familiar with the game's development. Bloomberg reached out to NetEase and Activision Blizzard for comment on the project's status, but neither company chose to comment on the matter.

Read more
Call of Duty will still get ‘premium paid content’ in 2023, says Activision
Soldier with weapon in Modern Warfare.

Activision said that it will be planning to release "premium paid content" related to the Call of Duty series in 2023 following reports claiming no new Call of Duty game will release next year.

Official Dark Water Level Gameplay - Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II

Read more