I read the Army vet's story. At 24 she was an adult, who did and made choices, willingly. That she 'felt' like a victim really came after their several encounters, when Lauer 'ghosted her' (her words) after the National Enquirer came to her home a year or 2 later. And she reached out to Lauer upon that happening, which he handled by asking, "WHO did you tell?" and then ghosting her.
Important points in this story: her career wasn't in jeopardy, she was already in her last days at NBC, having accepted an anchor job in her home state. Her future employment didn't count on Lauer. She approached Lauer after he flirted with her, asked him for career advice. They went to lunch, which was her choice. He, being married and a lech, came on to her and she responded willingly. (BTW, she never said if she got any career advice from him.)
I don't count this as "sexual harassment" the way I do the other women who have come forward. It's a tawdry tale of a young career woman choosing to have sex with someone more senior, famous, who flirted with her and let her know he was attracted to her. Highly tacky, but pretty typical. He didn't attack her, he didn't threaten her, and the things that were inappropriate were:
1. Lauer cheating on his wife (which is not against company policy or illegal)
2. Engaging in a personal / intimate relationship with someone at work (likely against company policy, but not illegal).