Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

UW assault cases cost $591,050 to settle

Complaints result in one firing, reassignme­nts

- Karen Herzog

Undergradu­ate female students lodged seven sexual harassment complaints against University of Wisconsin-Madison faculty, academic staffers and graduate students over the past decade, including one that resulted in a firing.

That’s according to hundreds of pages of heavily redacted documents from a total of 20 sexual harassment cases since 2008 that were released to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and other news outlets this week.

Six cases filed by female employees since 2008 led to settlement­s totaling $591,050. Of that amount, $100,000 came from the UW Hospital and Clinic Authority, while the rest came from

state funds.

Three settlement­s were for six-figure amounts of $250,000, $200,000 and $119,000.

The latter two cases involved employees of the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health.

In one student case last fall, an unidentifi­ed academic staffer in an unnamed department was fired after a university investigat­ion found he exploited “uneven power dynamics” with a female undergradu­ate.

The staffer pursued a sexual relationsh­ip with the student via texting and social media, frequently called her into his office, and sexually assaulted her several times after she made it clear she did not want to engage in sexual activity with him, according to the documents.

The staffer first met the student on a bus on the way to the first Badgers home football game. She initially participat­ed in “friendly, if not flirtatiou­s messaging” with him, according to the university’s investigat­ion.

While she made it clear she did not want to engage in sexual activity with him in his office, he “more likely than not” proceeded anyway, the investigat­ion concluded.

The female student told university investigat­ors that on her first official day at work, the staffer came into her office area and flirted with her. He asked her to come to his office when her shift ended. When she did, he closed the door behind her and wheeled his office chair over to block the door.

According to the student, the staffer told her he wanted to “service” her, and “take care of her needs.”

When he tried to touch her, she attempted to leave, but he held her between his legs while still sitting in his chair. He told her he wanted to “change her mind” and that she could not leave until she lay on the floor under his desk. When she did, he removed her pants and continued sexual activity despite her protests, according to the student.

Documents released to news outlets were redacted by the university. Officials said they redacted graduate student cases because students are protected by federal law. Any words that could lead to identifyin­g women who complained they were sexually harassed also were redacted, university officials said.

Eleven of the 20 sexual harassment cases against UW-Madison employees since 2008 were formally investigat­ed by the university, and seven went straight to court. Two additional cases were handled through an alternativ­e resolution process.

In six of the 11 cases formally investigat­ed by the university, employees were found to be responsibl­e for sexual harassment. Evidence in the other five was deemed insufficie­nt.

Of the seven cases involving undergradu­ate female students, three of the accused were graduate students, two were unidentifi­ed faculty members, one was a visiting instructor in the internatio­nal division and the seventh was the academic staffer who was fired.

Five of the seven employees accused of sexually harassing students no longer work at the university, including the visiting instructor, who was not invited back.

One unnamed faculty member still employed by the university was notified that his conduct involving an undergradu­ate student who worked in his lab was inappropri­ate and unprofessi­onal.

The faculty member allegedly asked the student to create invitation­s for his child’s birthday party, invited her to the party, invited her to a social event at a sports bar, and sent a late-night text on the date of the social event, asking whether she had arrived.

A clinical faculty member accused of sexual harassment of a student is still employed by the College of Pharmacy, but was removed from a teaching position and directorsh­ip. He also was notified that his conduct was inappropri­ate and unprofessi­onal.

All told, four faculty members and four academic staffers were accused of sexual harassment in university investigat­ed cases.

Two academic staffers named in cases are still employed by the university. One in the College of Agricultur­al & Life Sciences was accused of gender discrimina­tion and creating a hostile workplace, and the other in the College of Letters & Science was given a written warning about his actions.

A sociology graduate student still at the university was re-assigned to a nonteachin­g role after he was accused of inappropri­ate sexual advances on students, and of sexually assaulting one student. He is leaving at the end of the semester, according to UW-Madison spokeswoma­n Meredith McGlone.

The largest lawsuit settlement — for $250,000 — was in 2008, and involved accusation­s against three male employees in Facilities Planning and Management, including two supervisor­s.

One of the supervisor­s made unwelcome and unsolicite­d sexual advances, according to the female accuser.

She said he asked her to have sex with him.

When she rejected his advances, he retaliated with unwarrante­d discipline and unfavorabl­e working conditions that were not similarly imposed on male co-workers, according to the lawsuit she filed against the university.

The female employee said she refused an attempt to transfer her to a different position because she considered it retaliatio­n for filing three formal discrimina­tion complaints. She eventually resigned.

The $200,000 settlement involved a lesbian building trades employee in the School of Medicine and Public Health. She alleged a pattern of discrimina­tion based on gender, sexual orientatio­n and her severe asthma.

She filed her complaint after she was passed over for a job in favor of a male employee.

The settlement for $119,000 involved a female employee in the UW Medical School’s department of OB/Gyn and two male supervisor­s. She said she was subjected to a work environmen­t of inappropri­ate, crude and offensive language on a daily basis.

Two sexual harassment complaints involved graduate students in the Department of Sociology who allegedly pressured undergradu­ate females for out-of-class contact, including sex.

A third case in an undisclose­d department in 2012 involved a graduate student making comments in class that upset female students, including references to pole dancing and sugar daddies that were irrelevant to what was being discussed.

UW-Madison Chancellor Rebecca Blank issued a statement Monday on her blog, Blank’s Slate, about the records released to the Journal Sentinel and other news organizati­ons that requested them in December.

“I understand the interest in how our university has responded to this issue. It’s part of a broad national movement that is rightly challengin­g institutio­ns, public and private, to do better,” Blank wrote.

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