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2 Women Accuse Pa. Lawmaker of Abusive Behavior, Sexual Misconduct
Lancaster Online ^ | 2/28/18 | Angela Couloumbis, Brad Bumsted, Paula Knudse

Posted on 02/28/2018 9:07:55 PM PST by nickcarraway

Two women have accused state Rep. Nick Miccarelli of sexually or physically assaulting them in separate incidents over the last six years, The Caucus and The Philadelphia Inquirer have learned.

Top House leaders have launched an inquiry into the allegations, which the accusers leveled in a confidential complaint in early February, according to documents reviewed by the newspapers and interviews with multiple sources.

Miccarelli strongly denied the accusations.

The women allege in the complaint that the Delaware County Republican threatened, stalked, intimidated or sexually assaulted them. One is a state official and the other is a political consultant. The accusers, who dated Miccarelli at different times between 2012 and 2014, are requesting that he resign, according to sources familiar with the House’s investigation.

One of the women, who was in a relationship with Miccarelli in 2012, claimed in the complaint that during one argument, he brandished a gun while driving at speeds in excess of 100 mph, threatening to kill them both. The second woman alleges that Miccarelli forced her to have sex with him after their relationship ended in 2014.

The women said in interviews they remained silent for years because they feared that speaking up would jeopardize their careers, if not their lives. They are coming forward as the #metoo movement has emboldened hundreds of women across the nation to openly discuss what they describe as a pervasive culture of sexual harassment or abuse in the workplace.

Miccarelli, 35, a Ridley Park resident and Army veteran of the Iraq war who joined the legislature in 2009, denied the allegations in a text message and an interview this week, saying he has not seen the complaint and asserting that he was being denied an opportunity to directly address his accusers.

During that telephone interview, Miccarelli told a reporter: “What you are being told is absolute lies, a thousand percent lies,” adding he had “never laid a hand on a woman.”

In an earlier text to a reporter, Miccarelli challenged the sex-assault allegation, asserting that he and that woman had a consensual relationship and that she has never complained to him about his behavior.

In his text message, Miccarelli said hearing the claims from the newspapers was "the first time it was suggested that anyone’s filed anything against me." He continued: "No one has ever given me or told me about any complaints."

"What you are being told is absolute lies, a thousand percent lies."

He also wrote: "If you choose to ignore the truth, you do so at your own peril and I will hold you accountable.”

Sources told the newspapers Miccarelli believes he has text messages, emails and photos that counter the sexual assault allegations. In the interview, Miccarelli did not provide any such documentation. It was also unclear if he had a lawyer. Asked if he had one, he did not name one.

The women filed the complaint on Feb. 8 with a senior House ethics officer and lawyer, saying Miccarelli’s conduct violates the chamber’s workplace harassment policy. The newspapers have reviewed the three-page complaint, as well as records that show House leadership has since appointed the lawyer to investigate. At least one other House lawyer is now involved in the inquiry.

The women’s attorney, Terry Mutchler of the Harrisburg-based firm Mutchler Lyons, confirmed that her firm filed a complaint with the House. She said it details “serious assertions of sexual assault and domestic violence against a sitting member of the chamber.” She said her clients are cooperating with the investigation.

The women were not named in the complaint but have subsequently disclosed their identities to House lawyers investigating the accusations. The Inquirer and The Caucus are withholding their names because the newspapers do not identify victims of alleged sexual assault or domestic violence unless they request that information be made public.

In their complaint, the women ask that Miccarelli be held accountable for his “heinous acts.” They are also asking that “reasonable and appropriate safety measures” be put into place to protect them from retaliation, and that Miccarelli be told of the prohibition against retaliation in the chamber’s policy.

The women assert that they and others believe Miccarelli currently may carry a gun into the Capitol -- it was not clear if he has a permit to carry one -- and are asking that he be banned from carrying a firearm in the Capitol complex.

Stephen Miskin, spokesman for House Republican leaders, confirmed in a statement Wednesday that the House had launched an inquiry and that "law enforcement is involved." He did not elaborate.

“The safety of the public, employees and our members is of paramount concern," Miskin said. "These allegations are alarming, and if true, cannot and will not be tolerated in our Caucus, in the House, or anywhere."

After the newspapers reported the allegations online Wednesday, Gov. Wolf, a Democrat, called on Miccarelli to resign. "This report and the conduct detailed are disturbing," the governor said in a statement.

Miccarelli, too, responded to the news reports, posting a Facebook message in which he said he was "absolutely appalled" by the allegations and denied them "entirely." Saying he had not been treated fairly, he also wrote: "I would ask my constituents to ask themselves this: If your child was accused of something like this, would you rush to judgment, or would you wait to hear the facts?"

The five-term legislator's district, the 162nd in southeastern Delaware County, stretches from the just outside Darby to Philadelphia International Airport, and includes Ridley and Tinicum townships, as well as Glenolden and Folcroft boroughs.

In interviews with The Inquirer and The Caucus, the woman who dated Miccarelli in 2012 alleged that he was controlling and physically abusive, kicking, pinching and hitting her, even at legislative events they attended together.

She said she was so scared of Miccarelli that shortly before she ended her relationship with him, she stapled a note to her life insurance policy saying he should be considered a suspect in the event something happened to her. On the weekend she broke up with him, she said, she took members of her family to an undisclosed location.

In the complaint, in which she is referred to as Client 1, the woman also alleges that Miccarelli attempted to use potentially embarrassing personal information against her. The woman said she spoke to police about it. Investigators encouraged her to provide more information, but she ultimately decided not to because she feared he would harm her.

The second woman, a campaign operative who works with state Republicans, alleged in the complaint that Miccarelli was mentally and physically abusive. They had dated off and on for about a year before that.

In the complaint, she alleges that when she tried to end her relationship with him in late 2014, he came to her home and forced her to have sex. In an interview, she said she repeatedly told him that she did not want to be intimate. She said he held her neck during parts of the alleged assault.

She also said while the two were still in a consensual relationship, she believes that Miccarelli drugged her. In the complaint, she asserts that she became unconscious and that he engaged in “non-consensual sexual behavior” that evening.

In his text message to the newspapers, Miccarelli said: "Let me make this clear. I’ve never drugged or sexually assaulted anyone.”

The woman told The Inquirer and The Caucus that she did not alert police or seek a medical examination. She said she feared for her safety and worried that she would face career reprisals. The woman has worked professionally over the past decade assisting statewide and legislative GOP campaigns.

The woman said she confided in a co-worker the next day.

In an interview, the co-worker, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation, said the woman was unusually quiet that morning when she came into the office. The co-worker asked what was wrong, and said the woman told her she had been sexually assaulted by “Representative Nick Miccarelli.”

“She was very shaken up and was very scared,” the co-worker said.

Two sources have told the newspapers that the woman also has confided in at least four Republican lawmakers over the last six months about the incident, but asked them to keep her story confidential.

Emails shared with reporters also show she sought legal advice in the year following the alleged assault and initiated counseling last year to cope with the after effects of the incident.

In the months that followed the alleged assault, the woman said she struggled emotionally. She emailed her priest in October 2016, asking to meet with him.

“I was hoping you might say a short prayer over me,” she wrote in the Oct. 31 email. “I have been having some spiritual difficulty lately I believe is a result of what happened to me.”

In a Sept. 5, 2017 email, also reviewed by the newspapers, the woman sought the help of a Harrisburg-area therapist, saying: “I found your name when searching for therapists … that have experience dealing with PTSD sexual abuse issues.”

Late last year, she emailed a female legislator supporting bills to strengthen sexual harassment laws. She described the alleged assault, but did not name Miccarelli, identifying him only as “an unmarried Republican House member.” (He has since married.)

In the email, she tried to explain why she remained silent. Among other reasons, she described the impact going public would have on her father, who she said would carry “this burden in his heart for the rest of his life.”

“I carry the great weight of my shame every day,” she wrote. “I worry every day about what pain other women might be experiencing because I chose silence and self-preservation over doing what would have been right, although painful. I am ashamed of myself for that and I am not sure I will ever know what I can do to make up for it.”

The woman said the female legislator did not respond to her email.

[Caucus investigative reporter Mike Wereschagin contributed to this report.]

Editor's Note: The reporting on this story was done collaboratively by investigative journalists at The Caucus, a watchdog publication of LNP Media Group, and The Philadelphia Inquirer.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; News/Current Events; US: Pennsylvania
KEYWORDS: nickmiccarelli; pennsylvania; philadelphia

1 posted on 02/28/2018 9:07:55 PM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway
I don't know Representative Nick Miccarelli. If he can be show to be an abuser, get rid of him. If this turns out to be a false accusation, the accusers should be held accountable.
2 posted on 02/28/2018 9:14:31 PM PST by wmileo
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To: nickcarraway

I expect to see this in most of the areas where the DEMs don’t think they can win at the Ballot Box.

This is the Colorado plan/playbook all over again. Wait for an election year, make claims - even if untrue and land some really good blows on unsuspecting candidates.


3 posted on 02/28/2018 9:16:25 PM PST by greeneyes
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To: nickcarraway

Seems a little peculiar that both women dated him within a two year period of time, and those are the only two complaints filed against him. Almost as if they conspired to ‘get’ him.


4 posted on 02/28/2018 9:21:22 PM PST by EDINVA
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To: nickcarraway

Democraps lie. I think we see the 2018 strategy to try and take the House back ... make false accusations against Republicans. Demo c RATS are despicable vermin.


5 posted on 02/28/2018 9:26:52 PM PST by MHGinTN (A dispensational perspective is a powerful tool for discernment)
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To: nickcarraway

Heresay abounds.

Why not just file in actual court, if true?


6 posted on 02/28/2018 9:50:59 PM PST by Secret Agent Man ( Gone Galt; Not averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: greeneyes
This is the Colorado plan/playbook all over again. Wait for an election year, make claims - even if untrue and land some really good blows on unsuspecting candidates.

Exploiting the conservative base's "weakness" - their morality. Claims of abuse need not even be proven - just sow enough doubt that conservative voters stay home.

Cheaper than campaigning, when Dem money is tight. Get the media to run with these claims and pound them every news cycle - no different than Dem campaign ads except FREE.

7 posted on 02/28/2018 10:59:19 PM PST by ZOOKER (Until further notice the /s is implied...)
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To: nickcarraway

Nothing succeeds like success. Rats got away with this in Alabama, tried it with Cain and Thomas.
If they can’t prove this THEY should be charged with slander, libel and defamation of character


8 posted on 02/28/2018 11:01:54 PM PST by ZULU (Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts. - WC)
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To: ZOOKER

Yep. It keep on working. That’s why I don’t listen to it much anymore, especially if it’s an old case. Whatever it is it can’t be as bad as some of these DEMS have done - including Slick Willy and HRC.


9 posted on 03/01/2018 1:04:14 AM PST by greeneyes
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To: ZULU

Feminazi barracudas will continue to accuse anonymously until we say Enough.


10 posted on 03/01/2018 7:30:36 AM PST by victim soul (victim soul)
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To: greeneyes

Sadly, when the peso ring blackmail gate is finally aired, democrats will reject it as fake news. Twisted minds don’t like truth, they’re under ‘strong delusion’.


11 posted on 03/01/2018 7:36:17 AM PST by MHGinTN (A dispensational perspective is a powerful tool for discernment)
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To: MHGinTN
Pedogate ... As a Rothschild has said, 'if you want to control a nation, use pedophilia ' for the blackmail file presumably
12 posted on 03/01/2018 7:40:30 AM PST by MHGinTN (A dispensational perspective is a powerful tool for discernment)
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