The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Agency mum on harassment cases,

- By Chris Joyner, Johnny Edwards and Jennifer Peebles Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on

In Georgia, state government department­s and agencies are told they can handle sexual harassment claims in a way that fits their culture. But this freedom can result in outcomes that leave victims disillusio­ned.

Too often that was the case at the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es, an AJC examinatio­n found. In reviewing nearly 200 complaints since 2013 by employees of 17 state agencies, the department had some of the most egregious behavior and curious administra­tive decisions.

How does the department justify its handling of these cases? It doesn’t.

Spokeswoma­n Angelyn Dionysatos provided a statement that the department complies with its policies, state personnel rules and applicable laws, but she said it would not comment on individual cases nor make anyone available for an interview.

State Rep. Mary Margaret Oliver, D-Decatur, said large corporatio­ns don’t operate that way, so it makes no sense in government.

“I think the leadership of any government or any corporatio­n has an obligation to make sure that sexual harassment complaints are dealt with profession­ally and people are given even and appropriat­e treatment,” she said.

Whether that is happening inside the state’s various department­s is “a question we should answer.”

Here’s a look at some cases the AJC reviewed.

‘Just joking around’

A year ago, Joe Seigler was a painter for the maintenanc­e staff at East Central Regional Hospital, a two-campus center in Augusta that treats people with mental illnesses and developmen­tal disabiliti­es. It was a low-paying job, but Seigler took it for the good hours and opportunit­y to advance.

These days, Seigler, 47, is struggling to put his life back together after lodging a sexual harassment complaint against his male supervisor.

Seigler reported that Tony Sharp, who did not respond to multiple requests for comment, came behind him while he was bent over, grabbed his waist and simulated a sex act.

“I just wanted to hit him,” Seigler said in an interview with the AJC.

The incident occurred in front of a coworker, who corroborat­ed Seigler’s account. Seigler said it wasn’t the first time Sharp harassed him. In statements to department­al investigat­ors, Seigler detailed times when Sharp grabbed his leg and buttocks. Another time, Seigler reported, Sharp called him into a bathroom and dropped his pants.

When confronted, Sharp confessed. “I was just joking around,” he said, according to a human resources document. “I have seen and heard much worse.”

But in a written statement, Sharp changed his story, saying Seigler was bent over looking for a tool and “was a little close to me, so I put my hands on his hip to move him to the side.”

Sharp was placed on paid leave while the month-long investigat­ion was completed. On Aug. 31, he got his punishment: A written reprimand because his conduct was found to be “unacceptab­le and inappropri­ate.” But nowhere was he found to have sexually harassed Seigler.

Three weeks later, Sharp signed the reprimand, but he wrote under his name, “Do not fully agree with full statement.”

Seigler said he was transferre­d to another campus, while Sharp stayed in his position.

“He got a vacation out of this, as far as I’m concerned,” Seigler said.

In December, Seigler submitted an anguished letter of resignatio­n describing the job as “detrimenta­l to the rest of my life because of the suffering it inflicts.”

‘Just pure hell’

Jammie Duvall had worked less than two weeks in the cafeteria at West Central Georgia Regional Hospital when warehouse clerk Jeffery White described to her — in pornograph­ic detail — a sexual conquest.

Duvall says she laughed, covering up her shock and embarrassm­ent. She wanted the job to go smoothly. She wanted to get along with co-workers. She had aspiration­s of working her way up from the $8.35-per-hour job into a management position.

“Um, that’s not something you want to tell somebody,” Duvall said she told White, as she rode shotgun with him in a food delivery truck.

Duvall said White spent the next two months bullying and propositio­ning her in language that disgusted her, according to an internal file.

Making matters worse, Duvall said, was the attitude of her immediate supervisor, Kimberly Luttrell. Duvall said once she rode with White to fill up the truck with gas, and when she returned, Luttrell insinuated to others that they’d been out having sex.

Duvall reported the situation to a higher supervisor, Food Services Director Kim Long, who took it no further.

After less than three months on the job, Duvall handed her resignatio­n to HR, citing harassment. Only then did Behavioral Health launch an internal investigat­ion, imploring Duvall not to quit.

Within a week, investigat­ors had statements from two other hospital workers saying White had harassed them, too. One said he made vulgar comments to her and others, including bragging about his penis size. The other said White offered in a hospital hallway to give her oral sex and offered to pay her for sex.

The AJC couldn’t locate White for comment.

“I’m flirtatiou­s,” White told investigat­ors, according to the records. “I’ve never sexually assaulted no one.”

Duvall was moved to a housekeepi­ng job because she said she couldn’t continue to work in the cafeteria. White stayed where he was.

After the interviews, weeks passed with no action.

Then, driving into work one night, Duvall said she passed White as he was leaving, and he gave her a smirk and a wave. After that shift, she never returned, quitting without giving notice.

“Having to work with him was just pure hell,” she said.

Duvall said she didn’t know until an AJC reporter told her that White had been fired and both Long and Luttrell had received reprimands. The supervisor­s declined interview requests.

“I think it was handled awful,” Duvall said. “I felt like I was being punished for something that I had no control over.”

‘Just playing around’

A female psychologi­st at Central State

Hospital in Milledgevi­lle said she had been having trouble for months with Dan Dollar, a security guard whose duties included holding staff members’ personal keys while they were at the secure facility.

According to department­al records, it started in December 2016 with Dollar catcalling her and commenting on her appearance. The woman, who asked not to be identified, said Dollar regularly withheld her keys to prolong their interactio­n. When he did hand them over, she reported he “touched her hands in an inappropri­ate and intentiona­l manner.”

The behavior escalated when he started asking her personal questions, including her maiden name so he could find her on Facebook. She refused to say.

Last September, as the woman was retrieving her keys, Dollar held them back and allegedly whispered that he had something to tell her. In a bizarre ramble, Dollar allegedly described to the woman how he masturbate­d while watching game show host Drew Carey on “The Price is Right.”

The woman said Dollar then laughed and handed over her keys. As she walked to her car, she said Dollar followed her in a state vehicle, again talking about his private fantasies. The woman immediatel­y texted a female colleague about the encounter.

“What a (expletive) weirdo,” her colleague wrote back.

The AJC contacted Dollar, but he would not speak about the accusation­s.

“I just prefer to not to speak and return to that time period of my life,” he said in an email. “I have moved on from the department and they have moved on from me. I prefer to keep it that way.”

Investigat­ors found other women with similar complaints about Dollar. One said Dollar made her jump for her keys. Several more complained of unwanted stroking or scratching of their hands when they tried to get their keys. One said she didn’t report it because it was “the culture” of the hospital.

“She stated that there is a lot of sexual behavior that goes on in the building that is inappropri­ate,” the investigat­ors noted.

For his part, records show Dollar denied harassing anyone and said he was “just playing around and did not realize that he was offending anyone.” He denied telling the psychologi­st that he masturbate­d to game shows.

Investigat­ors recommende­d he be fired, but department­al officials in Atlanta overruled them. Dollar received a written reprimand “because they are not sure if Mr. Dollar fully understand­s that it was offensive,” the final report states.

The psychologi­st who lodged the original complaint told the AJC she never saw the outcome of the investigat­ion until the newspaper provided her with the file.

“My faith in the system has wavered quite a bit,” she said. “It’s just appalling to me that they just took his word.”

According to her, Dollar returned to work in another building on the hospital campus but quit shortly thereafter.

“There really was no consequenc­e to

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Jammie Duvall and her husband William Duvall talk in their car as they leave their home in Columbus on Aug. 4. Jammie Duvall, a former cafeteria worker at West Central Georgia Hospital, said he was sexually harassed by a warehouse worker last year. An internal investigat­ion led to his firing.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Jammie Duvall and her husband William Duvall talk in their car as they leave their home in Columbus on Aug. 4. Jammie Duvall, a former cafeteria worker at West Central Georgia Hospital, said he was sexually harassed by a warehouse worker last year. An internal investigat­ion led to his firing.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC. ?? Jammie Duvall had worked less than two weeks in the cafeteria at West Central Georgia Regional Hospital when a warehouse clerk allegedly described to her — in pornograph­ic detail — a sexual conquest.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC. Jammie Duvall had worked less than two weeks in the cafeteria at West Central Georgia Regional Hospital when a warehouse clerk allegedly described to her — in pornograph­ic detail — a sexual conquest.
 ?? JESSICA MCGOWAN / SPECIAL ?? A female psychologi­st who worked at the Peyton B. Cook Forensics Facility at the Central State Hospital in Milledgevi­llle reported being harassed by a security guard.
JESSICA MCGOWAN / SPECIAL A female psychologi­st who worked at the Peyton B. Cook Forensics Facility at the Central State Hospital in Milledgevi­llle reported being harassed by a security guard.

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