Lawmaker says he won't quit over payout
HARRISBURG — A veteran Pennsylvania state representative insisted Wednesday he was innocent of any misconduct and said he does not plan to resign after reports the state paid a quarter-million dollars to settle his former aide’s claim of sexual harassment.
Rep. Tom Caltagirone, D-Berks, said in a written statement he was prohibited from discussing specifics of any employment-related settlement, but added that from the start he has denied all accusations.
“I wanted my day in court but counsel implored the parties to settle because of the high cost of litigating any complaint, legitimate or not,” he wrote. “I will not engage in victim blaming.”
His comments came a day after newspapers in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh first reported that Pennsylvania taxpayers funded the 2015 payment. Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf on Tuesday urged Caltagirone to resign.
The details of the allegations against Caltagirone, 75, have not been made public.
Two years ago, House Democratic caucus chief counsel Nora Winkelman told the state’s Department of General Services, which runs a self-insurance fund that eventually paid on the claim, that a legislative assistant in Caltagirone’s district office had initially made a $1.5 million claim for “a complaint of discrimination, among other things” under a federal law that bans discrimination based on sex, race, color, national origin and religion.
The fund approved payments to the woman of about $165,000 and $82,500 to her lawyer. They both previously declined to comment and neither responded Wednesday to messages left after Caltagirone’s statement was released.
