Daily Southtown

Microsoft: Gates told emails were unseemly

- By Emily Flitter

Microsoft executives warned Bill Gates in 2008 about inappropri­ate emails he had sent to a female employee, a Microsoft spokesman said Monday.

The warning involved messages in which Gates, who at the time was a full-time employee and the company’s chair, asked an employee out on a date. Senior Microsoft executives learned of the emails in 2008, according to Frank Shaw, a Microsoft spokespers­on.

After they discovered the messages, executives warned Gates that his behavior was inappropri­ate and notified a group of board members, Shaw said. Gates told board members that he agreed that what he had done was inappropri­ate, and the board took no further action.

Gates left the company shortly thereafter in a long-planned departure, though he remained a member of its board until last year. The executives’ warnings to Gates were reported earlier by The Wall Street Journal.

The Journal quoted Bridgitt Arnold, a spokespers­on for Gates, as saying, “These claims are false, recycled rumors from sources who have no direct knowledge, and in some cases have significan­t conflicts of interest.”

In 2019, after The New York Times reported on Gates’s long-running relationsh­ip with sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, Microsoft’s board began looking into a report that Gates had, years earlier, had a sexual relationsh­ip with a subordinat­e at Microsoft.

Gates and his wife, Melinda French Gates, announced earlier this year that they were ending their 27-year marriage.

The Times reported in May that Gates had developed a reputation for questionab­le conduct in work-related settings.

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