Casey Wasserman’s name dropped from agency following Ghislaine Maxwell scandal
Casey Wassermanβs name has been scrubbed from the agency he founded decades ago, replaced with an amorphous moniker: βThe Team.β
Mondayβs move comes amid the lingering controversy over the sports mogulβs decades-old association with Ghislaine Maxwell, accomplice of the late sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. Following revelations of Wassermanβs salacious 2003 emails with Maxwell, several musicians and athletes β led by pop artist Chappell Roan and soccer star Abby Wambach β said that, to stay true to their values, they would leave the agency then known as Wasserman.
Fears of a broad flight of artists and agents prompted Wasserman to announce that he was selling his talent representation and sports marketing firm. Talks with prospective buyers have been ongoing, according to a person close to the agency but not authorized to speak publicly.
For now, the agency is still owned by Wasserman and private equity firm Providence Equity Partners.
Wasserman continues to lead LA28, the nonprofit group that will be staging the Summer Olympics in Los Angeles in two years. The LA28 boardβs executive committee unanimously voted to keep Wasserman as chairman, after reviewing known details surrounding his more than 20-year-old flirtations with Maxwell and his βstrong leadershipβ of the Games.
Visitors to the Wasserman agency website were greeted with a message saying the firm, as of Monday, was rebranding as the Team.
βFor 24 years, this company has been shaped by our work, our people and our unifying belief in the power of Sports, Music and Entertainment,β the message read. βThat philosophy remains the foundation of who we are β and where we are going.β
Wasserman was not mentioned in the website messaging. Nor was he pictured in its photos depicting smiling agents. Old press releases have been changed to refer to the company as the Team, not Wasserman.
The websiteβs background is now adorned with a grid of Tβs.
In a Feb. 13 memo to his staff, Wasserman acknowledged his appearance in a recent batch of documents released by the Department of Justice related to the late sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein and Maxwell had βbecome a distraction.β
Wasserman said he was βheartbroken that my brief contact with them 23 years agoβ had brought hardship to the agency he created in 2002.
βIβm deeply sorry that my past personal mistakes have caused you so much discomfort,β Wasserman wrote to his staff. βItβs not fair to you, and itβs not fair to the clients and partners we represent so vigorously and care so deeply about.β
Wasserman appears to have met Maxwell on a September 2002 humanitarian trip through Africa, sponsored by former President Clinton.
Wasserman, a prolific Clinton fundraiser whose famous grandfather helped the Democrat win the 1992 presidential election, was joined on Epsteinβs jet by his then-wife, Laura, actor Kevin Spacey, Epstein and his longtime companion Ghislaine Maxwell and others, including security agents.
Itβs not clear when Wasserman and Maxwell began corresponding via email. The messages contained in the Justice Department files are from March and April of 2003. In them, Wasserman writes about wanting to see Maxwell in a tight leather outfit and she offered to give him a massage that can βdrive a man wild.β
Maxwell was convicted of sexual abuse in 2021.
Wasserman has worked nearly a decade to bring the Olympics to Los Angeles.
Former Mayor Eric Garcetti recruited him to help L.A. win its host bid and the International Olympic Committee reportedly were impressed with Wassermanβs βnetwork of contacts.β
Behind the scenes, there have been tensions with Los Angeles political leaders. Mayor Karen Bass has said that Wasserman should step down from the high-profile role overseeing the Games. Bass said that βwe need to look at the leadershipβ of LA28 and that her job is to make sure that the city is βcompletely preparedβ for the Games.