The Norwalk Hour

Suit describes ‘sexist,’ ‘boys club’ workplace culture at AMR

EMT alleges company failed to adequately address sexual assault claims

- By Meghan Friedmann

In late 2020, EMT Anna Broggi shared disturbing allegation­s with her supervisor at American Medical Response’s New Haven branch, according to a pending lawsuit.

Broggi told her supervisor that on a recent night out socializin­g and drinking with colleagues, one coworker forcibly kissed and molested her, using his hand to silence her as she repeatedly pleaded for him to stop, the lawsuit claims.

Company officials downplayed her allegation­s and responded mostly with inaction, dragging their feet to investigat­e and never offering her resources to cope with her trauma, the lawsuit says.

It alleges Broggi’s treatment was part of a broader pattern at an organizati­on that allowed sexual harassment to take place with impunity.

AMR denied those claims in a legal filing. When asked for comment, AMR said in statements it takes allegation­s of harassment and assault seriously and that within the past year, it has installed

new leadership overseeing the New Haven branch.

In interviews with Hearst Connecticu­t Media Group, six current and former AMR New Haven employees – most of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity – described a culture where women have for years been subjected to sexual comments and other inappropri­ate behavior at the hands of men they worked with, including supervisor­s.

Five of those individual­s said they directly experience­d such inappropri­ate behavior; the sixth said he witnessed misconduct firsthand.

Three said they told supervisor­s about at least some of the troubling incidents, but as far as they knew managers took little or no action.

“To see something like this happen to (Broggi), that’s horrible, but what’s more horrible is that it’s not shocking,” said Lizbeth Jimenez, who worked for AMR New Haven from 2014 until 2021.

The branch is the primary ambulance service provider for New Haven and Hamden. It employs over 400 EMTs and paramedics, who respond to about 100,000 calls per year, according to its website.

Employees pointed to previous on- and off-duty accusation­s of sexual misconduct by AMR New Haven employees as further cause for concern about the company’s culture and standards.

Over the past decade police accused at least three men who worked there of sex crimes. One case, which resulted in a conviction, pertained to an employee’s behavior while on the job. A fourth employee was hired by AMR despite having been publicly accused of assault and sexual harassment.

“The entire culture there was just like a giant cesspool,” said a woman who worked for AMR as an emergency medical technician for over five years. She said she left several years ago.

The experience was so traumatic she said she has not been able to return to the workplace.

(The woman and others who spoke with reporters on the condition of anonymity cited concern that being identified would be detrimenta­l to continuing their careers in emergency medicine.)

Several interviewe­es said they hoped Broggi’s lawsuit sparks a culture change at AMR New Haven. Broggi does, too.

“The ideal outcome is that I am the last female that this happens to,” Broggi said. “I really want to make sure that this never happens to another female because I know how hard it has been.”

In statements to Hearst Connecticu­t Media, AMR said it “is committed to making every reasonable effort to prevent the occurrence of sexual abuse by any employee or independen­t contractor associated with AMR.”

“We take allegation­s of any harassment or assault seriously,” the company said. “All allegation­s of sexual abuse are treated as a serious matter and investigat­ed thoroughly.”

The assault

One night in November 2020, Broggi, an employee named Anthony Salerno and a third coworker “gathered in the parking lot next to the AMR building to socialize and drink,” her lawsuit says.

Broggi had one drink, per the lawsuit, which says once the third coworker left, Salerno suggested he and Broggi finish their drinks in his car on the cold evening.

Once inside the car, Salerno locked the doors, turned off the headlights and forcibly kissed Broggi, “(stuffing) his hand into her mouth and down her throat” to silence her after she repeatedly said ‘no,” the lawsuit says.

He then pinned her down and molested her, according to the lawsuit, which says she “repeatedly pleaded with him to stop” and attempted to unlock and open the car door. She eventually succeeded and fled, her complaint says.

In mid-December, Broggi went to the New Haven Police Department to report Salerno had assaulted her.

The resulting police report, obtained via a records request, says Salerno texted Broggi an apology after the alleged assault. When a detective questioned him about the text, Salerno said he was apologizin­g for kissing Broggi while he was engaged to another woman, according to the report.

“Salerno stated that all he did was kiss Broggi and that was the extent of what happened in his vehicle,” according to the police report.

“I said no and told you to stop multiple times and you didn’t. I had to force my way out of your car,” Broggi texted Salerno, according to the screenshot­s of the messages, which show she also told him not to “force (himself)” on her.

“I understand that and that is 100% the reason why I feel so entirely like a piece of shit,” Salerno wrote back.

Police closed their investigat­ion, citing a “lack of evidence.”

New Haven Police Department spokespers­on Scott Shumway said in an email the agency “conducted a thorough investigat­ion into the allegation­s, considerin­g all the evidence available, and determined that there was not probable cause to apply for an arrest warrant.”

Salerno declined to comment through a family member.

The company’s response

Broggi also brought the matter to multiple AMR managers, according to the lawsuit.

In late 2020, when Broggi first reported her assault allegation­s to a supervisor, he agreed to her request that she not work with Salerno.

But he told her there was nothing else AMR could do because the event did not take place on company property, the lawsuit alleges; AMR disputes that in court filings.

Seven months later, Broggi learned the company had a duty to investigat­e the alleged assault regardless of where it took place, according to the lawsuit.

She brought the matter to a different supervisor, Timothy Craven. The lawsuit alleges Craven had an “intimidati­ng manner,” treated Broggi with “hostility and contempt” and blamed her for what occurred.

The lawsuit says Broggi was “crying and shaking” as she described the alleged assault. Craven responded “by rebuking her: ‘Calm down, this is not a big deal, you should not be getting so worked up,’” the lawsuit says.

Later, Craven suggested Salerno likely thought his actions were OK because Salerno and Broggi had briefly dated, according to the lawsuit, which says Craven “also stated that sometimes when alcohol is involved the lines get blurred.”

In court filings, AMR disputed the lawsuit’s descriptio­n of Craven’s response. Craven was not the supervisor told about the allegation­s seven months earlier.

Craven, who now works in a different role with AMR, did not respond to press inquiries.

In a court filing, AMR acknowledg­ed the company did not investigat­e Broggi’s claims when she first reported them to a supervisor. The company claimed it “conducted a thorough investigat­ion into (Broggi’s) allegation­s shortly thereafter.”

But the court filing does not make clear exactly when it began investigat­ing and company officials did not answer questions from Hearst Connecticu­t Media about the investigat­ion’s timing.

AMR also denied the sexual assault occurred in the court filing, though the company said it issued Salerno a written warning and ordered him to take several workplace training modules following a company investigat­ion in the summer of 2021.

According to Broggi’s lawsuit, AMR placed Salerno on administra­tive leave but allowed him to return to work shortly thereafter because he was not criminally charged.

Salerno left AMR in March, according to his LinkedIn profile.

Additional allegation­s

According to Broggi’s complaint, problems in the workplace began well before the assault, as several women raised complaints about an EMT “who subjected them to sexual harassment and outright sexual assault.”

The EMT resigned but was allowed to rejoin AMR after the women who complained left, according to the lawsuit, which says he still worked there as of May 2022.

AMR disputed that sexual harassment complaints were made against the EMT but admitted that he resigned from the company and was later rehired.

The six current and former employees interviewe­d by Hearst Connecticu­t Media said that, shortly after starting work there, they came to believe AMR had a cultural problem because of inappropri­ate behavior they experience­d and witnessed firsthand. Four said comments about the appearance of women employees were pervasive.

One woman told Hearst Connecticu­t Media a colleague sexually harassed her. She said she told supervisor­s, who said she would no longer be put on the same shifts as the colleague and the matter would be investigat­ed.

No one ever followed up with her, she said.

One man, who said he still works at AMR, described his first impression of the company’s culture. It immediatel­y “seemed like such an accustomed thing for people to be able to be pushy with the females there,” he said.

“There’s people here who’ve asked girls what kind of underwear they wear,” he said. “There’s people who’ve asked what size waist girls are in front of everybody.”

Jimenez, a former longtime employee, said men at AMR continuous­ly made inappropri­ate comments about her body.

Supervisor­s also perpetrate­d harassment, according to Jimenez, who remembered an occasion when she requested a larger size shirt from a manager.

“He refused to (give me a larger shirt) because, he said, ‘What’s wrong with your shirt being too tight?’” Jimenez alleged.

Kalie Siciliano, who said she worked at AMR for three months in 2015, alleged a colleague asked her to show him her breasts while she was alone with him in an ambulance.

She was just 21 at the time, she said, and felt uncomforta­ble, pressured and fearful of what would happen if she did not comply. But she regretted it, she said, and when a similar encounter with a different man who worked there took place some time later, she refused.

As for Broggi, she claimed in her lawsuit she also faced sexual harassment at the hands of a supervisor.

Not long after she joined AMR, the lawsuit alleges, the supervisor “grabbed (Broggi’s) wrist and told her that he would do anything for her.”

On another occasion, the supervisor “put his hand on Ms. Broggi’s thigh while asking her if she wanted a bottle of water,” the lawsuit says.

It describes a third incident when he allegedly insisted Broggi tuck in her shirt even though she stated she preferred not to.

“Thereafter, his eyes lingered over her chest area, and he said: ‘I don’t know why you didn’t want to tuck your shirt in. Look how good you look now,’” per the lawsuit.

In court, AMR denied the allegation­s against the man, and said Broggi was asked to have her shirt tucked to maintain a “profession­al appearance.”

After Hearst Connecticu­t Media shared these claims with AMR, the company issued a statement describing “an extensive internal process that includes specific actions on reporting and investigat­ing (harassment) allegation­s.”

“We strive to create a culture of respect and profession­alism in all of our business units. We also continue to develop personnel who are critical in implementi­ng a profession­al work environmen­t in our operations and elsewhere,” the company said.

Criminal histories

Given how some of his colleagues behaved around coworkers, one current AMR employee worried about how they behave around patients.

“How are we employing all these people who can’t be trusted?” he asked. “We’re putting them in the back of an ambulance alone with sometimes unconsciou­s people…It’s very disgusting.”

A few AMR New Haven employees have previously made headlines over sex crime accusation­s.

Mark Powell, a former AMR New Haven EMT, received a three-and-ahalf-year prison sentence after he was convicted of sexually assaulting a 22year-old woman in 2011 in the back of an ambulance. The woman had been under his care and in and out of consciousn­ess at the time of the assault. Powell declined to discuss the case.

Other cases were not related to workplace conduct at AMR.

In 2020, an EMT named Bryon Westcott pleaded no contest to one count of second-degree child molestatio­n, according to documents from Providence Superior Court in Rhode Island. The offense took place on multiple occasions between 2004 and 2005, a criminal informatio­n sheet says.

Westcott received a prison sentence of 10 years to be suspended after two years, according to a docket in Rhode Island’s online court database. He was released in January, Connecticu­t’s sex offender registry shows. Wescott did not return a request for comment.

In August 2021, Branford police arrested 45year-old Thomas Papa, a paramedic. He faces eight criminal charges, including counts of seconddegr­ee sexual assault, enticing a minor by a computer, commercial sexual abuse and risk of injury to a child, according to New Haven Superior Court records.

Papa, whose case remains pending, has pleaded not guilty to all counts, Connecticu­t’s court database shows. His attorney declined comment.

This year, AMR New Haven Herschel Wadley, a man with “a known history of sexual harassment and violence against women,” according to Broggi’s lawsuit.

In 2018, police accused Wadley, a battalion chief for the New Haven Fire Department, of choking a woman in a store. They charged him with thirddegre­e assault, but the case was dismissed after Wadley completed probation, the New Haven Independen­t reported.

In 2021, a sexual harassment investigat­ion conducted by an outside firm and commission­ed by New Haven found Wadley had “extremely poor sexual and physical boundaries with females.”

Wadley, who had by then been promoted to deputy chief and retired ahead of his possible terminatio­n, denied allegation­s of inappropri­ate conduct at the time. He did not respond to requests for comment.

As of September, Wadley no longer worked at AMR, according to Broggi.

Hoping for change

Broggi says she was initially excited for her “real job” out of college when she started as an EMT at AMR in 2019. She was 22 years old, she said.

By September 2021, she felt “fed up” with how the company had dealt with her concerns. The following March, she took AMR to court.

Current and former employees who worked for AMR said they hope Broggi’s lawsuit triggers reforms at the company.

“I am in awe of the courage and bravery that it takes to take on AMR,” said one former employee. “I’m hoping that it forces AMR to change.”

Even with a strong support system and a close family, what Broggi went through “has been without a doubt the worst and most troubling experience of my entire life,” Broggi said.

She felt “degraded” by the company, she said, calling AMR’s “lack of response…a real slap in the face and disrespect­ful.”

Deciding to go public was not easy. But to Broggi, it seemed the only way forward.

“It is extremely scary and extremely emotional,” she said. But “I want to be a woman who empowers other women … it seemed like going public was really the only way to drive the necessary change.”

 ?? Arnold Gold / Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? An AMR ambulance heads to a call in New Haven in May 2020.
Arnold Gold / Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo An AMR ambulance heads to a call in New Haven in May 2020.
 ?? Arnold Gold / Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? AMR New Haven EMT Anna Broggi
Arnold Gold / Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo AMR New Haven EMT Anna Broggi

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