Springfield News-Sun

Prosecutor accused of sex harassment of staff

- By Bethany Bruner

A state agency responsibl­e for investigat­ing misconduct by Ohio attorneys and judges has filed a complaint against Hocking County Prosecutor Ryan Black, accusing him of, among other things, being caught by his fiancé amid a sexual encounter with a county commission­er.

Black, 41, was elected Hocking County prosecutor in November 2020 and submitted his resignatio­n last month, but it is not effective until April 19. He submitted his resignatio­n after being sued in U.S. District Court in Columbus for sexual discrimina­tion by two former female employees.

On Wednesday, the Ohio Disciplina­ry Counsel, an office of the Ohio Supreme Court that investigat­es and prosecutes attorneys and judicial officers who are accused of ethical and profession­al misconduct, filed a formal complaint against Black with the Ohio Board of Profession­al Conduct. The board is a quasi-judicial body appointed by the state Supreme Court that hears complaints of misconduct and makes recommenda­tions to Ohio’s highest court on an appropriat­e sanction, which can include disbarment.

The 30-page complaint contains some of the allegation­s included in the sexual discrimina­tion lawsuit, such as accusation­s that Black wanted female staffers wearing bikinis to move a couch into his office that Black later referred to as a “casting couch” and “insinuated he was going to video record sexual activity on the couch.” Another accusation is that a former victim advocate in the office felt pressured into having a sexual relationsh­ip with Black.

But the complaint also includes new allegation­s involving an assistant prosecutor in the office who resigned after about 11 months on the job, and accusation­s that Black celebrated a staff member’s miscarriag­e.

According to the complaint, Black had been working with the female assistant prosecutor when he made a comment to another employee about the assistant prosecutor’s dress.

The complaint says Black commented that the dress “made him want (her) to wrap her legs around his face...”

Black also sent multiple, unsolicite­d photograph­s of himself shirtless to the female assistant prosecutor and said he would try to get a raise for her, texting her in part, “I’d give ya 200k if it meant I got flattered all the time.”

Another female assistant prosecutor attempted to avoid Black altogether by limiting her time in the office, barricadin­g her desk space with bookshelve­s and doing work outside of normal office hours, the complaint says.

The unprofessi­onal behavior Black exhibited toward staff created a hostile work environmen­t, the complaint says, citing Black’s use of obscenity “to the point that it made staff members uncomforta­ble,” erratic behavior that concerned staff because Black was known to keep a firearm in his office, and staff members determinin­g that “regularly compliment­ing (Black’s) physical appearance was effective” in placating him.

Text messages within the disciplina­ry complaint included several between Black and a female staff member who said she felt pressured to have a sexual relationsh­ip with Black because he could fire her. The texts made multiple references to sexual interactio­ns, Black buying her lunch, and encouragin­g her to visit him at home for rendezvous­es under the guise of running work-related errands.

In one text message, the staffer told Black she had purchased new work clothes. Black replied, in part: “If you look dashing and I grope you don’t sue me lmao.”

The complaint accuses Black of having an emotional outburst in the face of that same female staff member and then forcing her to take a two-week leave from the office, calling her “unstable.”

Another accusation in the complaint is that Black, who was engaged, had a sexual relationsh­ip with a client.

The complaint says Black’s fiancé came home early in August 2023 and found Hocking County Commission­er Jessica Dicken and Black engaged in sex. The disciplina­ry complaint states the conduct was inappropri­ate because the prosecutor’s office represents the county commission­ers as clients in legal matters.

According to the complaint, Dicken and Black had no sexual relationsh­ip prior to their elections to their respective positions.

Dicken is currently suspended from her position as a commission­er because of an open felony indictment filed in September, alleging she mismanaged funds while acting as the Hocking County Fair Board secretary.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States