Liberty University sues ex-president Falwell over hidden affair

The conservative, evangelical school seeks $30m from Jerry Falwell Jr for damages stemming from ‘immodesty’.

Liberty University President Jerry Falwell Jr speaks during the school's commencement ceremonies in Lynchburg, Virginia, May 11, 2019 [File: Jonathan Drake/Reuters]

Liberty University has sued its former president Jerry Falwell Jr, a once influential figure among US evangelical Christians, saying he undermined its moral standards by concealing his wife’s affair with a pool attendant who attempted to extort them.

The complaint filed on Thursday in a state court in Lynchburg, Virginia seeks at least $30 million in damages.

It said Falwell, 58, breached his duties by refusing to disclose his and his wife Becki’s relationship with the attendant, and negotiating a higher salary and severance package when he knew the affair could damage the school.

Liberty said Falwell improperly mixed his university duties with his personal life despite knowing that “infidelity, immodesty, and acceptance of a loose lifestyle would stand in stark contrast to the conduct expected of leaders at Liberty.”

Falwell did not immediately respond to a text and a voice message on Friday seeking comment.

Lawyers who have represented Falwell in recent litigation could not immediately be reached or did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Falwell resigned from Liberty last August, one day after the pool attendant, Giancarlo Granda, told Reuters that he had a multi-year sexual relationship with the Falwells.

Giancarlo Granda, who was befriended by Liberty University President Jerry Falwell Jr and his wife Rebecca while he was working as a pool attendant at a luxury Miami Beach hotel and was later backed by them in a business venture involving a youth hostel, is pictured on August 10, 2020 [Jonathan Ernst/Reuters]

Granda had met the Falwells in Miami in 2012, five years after Falwell became Liberty’s president. Falwell had succeeded his late father Jerry Falwell Sr, the prominent televangelist and Liberty’s founder.

Liberty said Falwell’s conduct contravened the “Liberty Way”, its term for centering life on a rigorous education and a commitment to faith and to Biblical standards of morality.

It wants Falwell to pay $10 million in compensatory damages, which it said can be tripled under Virginia law, plus punitive and other damages. It also wants him to return phones, computers and other property belonging to the school.

A spokesman for Liberty declined Reuter’s request to comment on the lawsuit.

While at Liberty, Falwell had become a force in American conservative politics, and his endorsement of Donald Trump in the 2016 US presidential race helped win over evangelicals in a crowded Republican field.

Prior to his departure, Falwell took a leave of absence after posting on social media, and then deleting, a photo of himself with his arm around his wife’s assistant, where his pants were partially unzipped. Falwell later told a local radio station the photo was meant as a joke.

In October, Falwell had sued Liberty for defamation, saying it damaged his reputation by lending credence to what he called Granda’s “lies”. He dropped that lawsuit in December.

Source: Reuters