Terry Crews Says #MeToo Victims Aren't Looking For Fame Or Money
The 2019 ESSENCE Festival is in full swing as the three-day event kicked off on Friday in New Orleans. The annual, weekend-long celebration is widely known for its celebrity parties and star-studded concerts, but ESSENCE Fest has thought-provoking panel discussions, as well. According to Deadline, on Friday, the “Breaking of Silence to Heal Our Communities” session featured actor Terry Crews and his wife Rebecca King-Crews along with author Asante McGee who contributed to the controversial, award-winning Lifetime docu-series, Surviving R. Kelly.
During their discussion, Crews once again opened up about allegedly being sexually assaulted by a former agent for William Morris Endeavor named Adam Venit. The 50-year-old said that he was groped at a party back in 2016, and although he thought it was important to meet with WME executives and report the incident, they didn’t take any action as far as disciplining Venit for his alleged behavior.

Paras Griffin/Getty Images
“I did come forward right away,” Crews said. “I went right to the agency where this man worked and told everybody. I didn’t go public right away. I gave them time to rectify the situation. I wanted them to get rid of this man.” While there is more acceptance now, Crews doesn’t believe that anyone would have taken him seriously when the incident occurred. “This was pre-Me Too, if I would have gone to the police, I would have been laughed out of the precinct. This was also a time when people believed that you as a man couldn’t be sexually assaulted. It was impossible to get anyone to believe.”
The Brooklyn Nine-Nine actor also…