Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pennsylvan­ia paid out $900,000 to settle sexual harassment lawsuit

Revenue Department manager was accused

- By Liz Navratil

HARRISBURG — The Wolf administra­tion in 2016 paid $900,000 to settle a sexual harassment lawsuit against a former mid-level manager in the Revenue Department, the largest payout made public to date involving allegation­s of sexual misconduct in Pennsylvan­ia state government.

Administra­tion officials confirmed Monday that the payment went to a woman who worked for the department, which collects taxes and enforces the state’s tax law. The woman, a longtime employee, accused a district administra­tor in her department of harassing her, sexually assaulting her and making racial slurs, including references to slavery. The woman said the harassment occurred over a two-year period between 2011 and 2013, when Republican­Tom Corbett was governor.

The payout, first reported Monday afternoon by The Associated Press, is the largest that has been made public so far. Last month, the Pittsburgh PostGazett­e and Philadelph­ia Inquirer reported that House Democrats in 2015 had secretly paid nearly $248,000 to a onetime legislativ­e staffer who said that state Rep. Thomas Caltagiron­e, D-Berks, had sexually harassed her over several years.

The settlement in the case involving the revenue employee stems from a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvan­ia. In the case, the woman claimed that Albert Forlizzi II, 62, “used his position to abuse ... her in blatantly sexual and racist ways,” including fondling her breasts and touching her vagina.

According to a complaint filed in the lawsuit, at one point Mr. Forlizzi, who is white, told the woman, who is black, that “he would have had her as his slave in the Civil War era.”

The Post-Gazette and Inquirer do not typically name victims of sexual or indecent assault unless they ask to be named.

Court records show that Mr. Forlizzi pleaded no contest in state court to charges of indecent

assault and official oppression and is partway through a four-year probation sentence.

He also is required to register as a sex offender, according to court records.

A message left at a phone number listed for Mr. Forlizzi was not returned Monday night, and his attorney declined to comment. Mr. Forlizzi no longer works for the state.

David Koller, the Philadelph­ia-based attorney representi­ng the woman, said the experience was difficult for his client, who now struggles with post-traumatic stress disorder. “Everyone will look at the money and think that it’s great and it’s helpful, but it obviously doesn’t solve or resolve all of the issues of what happened to her,” Mr. Koller said in a phone interview Monday night.

He added later, “To my client’s credit, I think that she did as great of a job as anyone could under these circumstan­ces in sharing what happened to her ...”

“The racial allegation­s alone were terrible, and so when you couple that on top of the sexual harassment allegation­s, it’s a case that is unbelievab­le,” he said.

In a statement, J.J. Abbott, spokesman for Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf, called the conduct “abhorrent, appalling and criminal.”

“This specific 2013 case is egregious conduct,” Mr. Abbott said. “The abuser deserved to be held accountabl­e and the victim deserved justice for what she endured.”

News of this settlement comes amid revelation­s that others in the Capitol have been accused of sexual harassment or similar misconduct.

The Inquirer and Post-Gazette have requested, under the state’s Right-to-Know law, all payouts by administra­tion officials dating back a decade.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether the $900,000 was the only payout that has been authorized in that time frame.

The newspapers have reported that the state Legislatur­e quietly paid one settlement of $248,000 to a woman who worked for Mr. Caltagiron­e. House Democratic officials have said they settled the case to avoid a costlier legal battle.

Mr. Caltagiron­e has said, in a statement, that he is innocent and had wanted to fight the allegation­s in court.

Eight women and three men have told The Philadelph­ia Inquirer and Daily News that Sen. Daylin Leach, a Democrat from Montgomery County running for Congress, made offcolor jokes or inappropri­ately touched young women who worked for him.

Tim Solobay, a one-time senator from Washington County who was the state’s fire commission­er, resigned last month following an allegation that he inappropri­ately touched a female staffer.

He has denied the allegation.

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