American Apparel Ousts Controversial Founder for Alleged Misconduct

By Jason Fell Jun 19, 2014

Dov Charney’s wild ride as founder and CEO of clothing giant American Apparel appears to be at an end. The company’s board of directors has voted to replace Charney as chairman and notified him of its intent to terminate him as president and CEO.

In a statement released last night, American Apparel said Charney’s dismissal “grew out of an ongoing investigation into alleged misconduct.” No other details about the situation were released.

The board said it appointed Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer John Luttrell as interim CEO. Board members Allan Mayer and David Danziger were appointed co-chairmen.

Related: How RadiumOne Did the Right Thing in Firing Its CEO

Charney’s time atop his clothing company was plagued by controversy. In 2009, the company came under fire for hiring illegal immigrants to work its Los Angeles factory. Charney himself has been accused of sexually harassing female employees (though some of those claims were thrown out) and of diving at and then choking a male employee before rubbing dirt in his face.

Born in Montreal, Charney started making his own T-shirts in 1989 during his second year attending Tufts University in Massachusetts. Having a deep interest in American history and culture, Charney later called his clothing company American Apparel. The company went public in 2007.

At market close yesterday, American Apparel stock was trading at about 64 cents per share. The stock was trading about 25 percent higher today in premarket trading.

Related: Leadership Lessons From the Trenches of Silicon Valley

Dov Charney’s wild ride as founder and CEO of clothing giant American Apparel appears to be at an end. The company’s board of directors has voted to replace Charney as chairman and notified him of its intent to terminate him as president and CEO.

In a statement released last night, American Apparel said Charney’s dismissal “grew out of an ongoing investigation into alleged misconduct.” No other details about the situation were released.

The board said it appointed Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer John Luttrell as interim CEO. Board members Allan Mayer and David Danziger were appointed co-chairmen.

Related: How RadiumOne Did the Right Thing in Firing Its CEO

Charney’s time atop his clothing company was plagued by controversy. In 2009, the company came under fire for hiring illegal immigrants to work its Los Angeles factory. Charney himself has been accused of sexually harassing female employees (though some of those claims were thrown out) and of diving at and then choking a male employee before rubbing dirt in his face.

Born in Montreal, Charney started making his own T-shirts in 1989 during his second year attending Tufts University in Massachusetts. Having a deep interest in American history and culture, Charney later called his clothing company American Apparel. The company went public in 2007.

At market close yesterday, American Apparel stock was trading at about 64 cents per share. The stock was trading about 25 percent higher today in premarket trading.

Related: Leadership Lessons From the Trenches of Silicon Valley

The rest of this article is locked.

Join Entrepreneur+ today for access.

Subscribe Now

Already have an account? Sign In

Jason Fell

VP, Native Content at Entrepreneur
Entrepreneur Staff
Jason Fell is the VP of Native Content, managing the Entrepreneur Partner Studio, which creates dynamic and compelling content for our partners. He previously served as Entrepreneur.com's managing editor and as the technology editor prior to that.

Related Content