The chaos continues within the subterranean Fox News bunker as executives, anchors, and staffers grapple with the continuing fallout of the network’s ongoing sexual-harassment scandal. Last week, prime-time veteran Bill O’Reilly stepped down amid news of sexual-harassment allegations and settlements of those allegations—just nine months after former Fox News boss Roger Ailes was forced out under similar circumstances. But life at Fox News is not back to normal. While staffers are finally beginning to open up about their experiences, insiders worry that the scandal didn’t end with O’Reilly and Ailes—and that “there’s more to come.” (O’Reilly and Ailes have denied any wrongdoing.) On Thursday, CNN reported that the Justice Department’s investigation into sexual harassment at Fox News, and whether the company properly disclosed settlement payments to shareholders, has widened to include a United States Postal Inspection Service probe into potential financial crimes. According to Brian Stelter, the investigators have been asking questions about mysterious consultants who worked with Ailes, known by people within the company as “friends of Roger.”

The billion-dollar question hanging over Fox News is who knew what, and when. Since Ailes’s ouster, the network has been run in part by co-president Bill Shine, a longtime executive who has received support from the Murdochs. Now, however, Rupert’s sons James and Lachlan, the heirs to their father’s media empire, may be re-evaluating. According to New York’s Gabe Sherman, Shine, worried about his job, asked “the Boys” for a public statement of support—and the Murdoch brothers refused. Sherman suggests that the rebuke could presage further shakeups at the network. (Critics have called Shine “the man who knew too much.”)

Shine, Fox News, and parent company 21st Century Fox all denied that such an exchange had taken place. But Shine’s former boss, martial-arts master and longtime 10 P.M. primetime anchor Sean Hannity suggested otherwise. “Gäbe i pray this is NOT true because if it is, that’s the total end of the FNC as we know it. Done. Best Sean,” he wrote on Twitter, later apologizing for the typo. And then, a few minutes later: “Somebody HIGH UP AND INSIDE FNC is trying to get an innocent person fired. And Gabe I KNOW WHO it is. Best Sean.”

Hannity declined to say who within the company might be trying to smear Shine, but he offered up a hashtag in support. “#Istandwithbill”, he tweeted, before apparently realizing that there was another Bill formerly at Fox News. “I’ll change it. #Istandwithshine,” he added.

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