NEW YORK — In a case that became a closely-watched test of whether a corporation would back its journalists and stand up to President Donald Trump, Paramount Global decided to pay Trump $16 million to settle a lawsuit regarding editing at CBS' storied ''60 Minutes'' news program.
Aftereffects of the deal are likely to linger. Journalists were infuriated Wednesday and a senator wants to investigate whether bribery laws were broken. The company was hoping to put the issue to rest as it seeks administration approval of a merger.
Paramount, which owns CBS, says the money will go to Trump's future presidential library and to pay his legal fees, and it is not apologizing or expressing regret about the story. The company announced the deal overnight, before a Wednesday morning shareholders meeting.
Trump's lawyers claimed he suffered ''mental anguish" following the ''60 Minutes'' interview in October with his Democratic opponent, then-Vice President Kamala Harris, and sued for $20 billion.
Case highlights decision by editors in putting news show together
At issue was the broadcast's editing. Harris was shown giving two different answers to a question about Israel by correspondent Bill Whitaker in clips aired on ''60 Minutes'' and ''Face the Nation.'' Both responses came as part of a long-winded answer that Harris gave to Whitaker.
Editing for brevity's sake is commonplace in television. What was jarring was hearing different words from Harris directly after Whitaker spoke. Trump said CBS was trying to make his opponent look better; CBS said that claim had no merit in trying to get the case thrown out. Many legal experts dismissed the president's claim.
But the Trump-appointed head of the Federal Communications Commission launched an investigation — a complication for Paramount as it seeks administration approval of its proposed merger with Skydance Media.