The head of “60 Minutes” told the show’s staff on Monday that he would not apologize to President Trump as part of any prospective settlement in a lawsuit brought by the president against their network, CBS, according to people with knowledge of the remarks.
The comments by Bill Owens, the executive producer who oversees the long-running news program, came as CBS’s parent company, Paramount, is pursuing settlement talks with Mr. Trump over his accusations that the network deceptively edited an interview with Kamala Harris. Many legal experts have described the lawsuit as far-fetched and baseless.
“There have been reports in the media about a settlement and/or apology,” Mr. Owens said, according to two people who heard his remarks. “The company knows I will not apologize for anything we have done.”
Many Paramount executives believe a settlement would increase the odds that the Trump administration will approve a pending multibillion-dollar merger with another company, and Shari Redstone, Paramount’s controlling shareholder, supports the effort.
But the move has caused deep distress inside CBS News and particularly at “60 Minutes,” which broadcast the interview with Ms. Harris in October that is at the center of the lawsuit. Journalists there believe a settlement would represent an extraordinary capitulation because the editing of the Harris interview was in keeping with standard journalistic practice.
In the prime-time version, Ms. Harris appeared to give a different answer to one question than the response she gave in a preview of the interview that aired the day before. CBS has said that Ms. Harris gave one lengthy answer and that it chose to air different portions at different times.
At the meeting on Monday, held at the “60 Minutes” office in Midtown Manhattan, Mr. Owens spoke to several of the show’s correspondents — including Anderson Cooper, Lesley Stahl and Bill Whitaker — along with other on-air journalists and crew members. Some traveled to New York for the occasion.
Mr. Owens said that CBS planned on Monday to send an unedited transcript and camera feeds of the Harris interview to the Federal Communications Commission. The agency, which is led by Brendan Carr, a Trump appointee, formally requested those materials from the network last week.
“The edit is perfectly fine; let’s put that to bed so we can get on with our lives,” Mr. Owens said about the transcript, according to the people who heard his remarks.
Mr. Owens said that he had not spoken with Ms. Redstone about the prospect of a settlement.
A spokesman for Paramount did not immediately respond to a request for comment.