Judge orders Nichols-Hendrickson settlement talks

PORT ANGELES — With a 10-day trial looming, attorneys for Clallam County Prosecuting Attorney Mark Nichols and the woman who has accused him of sexual harassment will attempt to resolve their differences.

The lawyers will meet at 9 a.m. Friday for a settlement conference to resolve the June 1, 2017, federal district court civil complaint filed by Nichols’ former office manager and admitted romantic interest, Tina Hendrickson.

The meeting was ordered Nov. 21 by U.S. Magistrate Judge David W. Christel.

“It’s fairly common in civil cases,” Bill McCool, the Tacoma-based court’s spokesman, said Wednesday.

“There are many tools available to a judge to settle cases.

“One is to schedule a settlement conference with the parties.

“It’s a case-by-case determination.”

Trial briefs, proposed questions for a prospective jury and jury instructions were submitted to federal District Court Judge Benjamin Settle by Nov. 20.

A pretrial conference is scheduled for Monday.

A 10-day jury trial is slated to begin at 9 a.m. Dec. 11.

Hendrickson, no longer employed by Clallam County, was a family friend of Nichols when he hired her following his first successful run for office in November 2014.

Nichols won re-election over challenger Selinda Barkhuis, former treasurer, in returns certified Tuesday.

Hendrickson said she rejected Nichols’ unwanted romantic overtures, claimed he forced her to hug him and touched her inappropriately on her buttocks “a couple of dozen times, on a pretense of removing loose strings,” according to her interview with county Human Resources Manager Rich Sill.

Nichols said he heeded her rejection of romantic involvement and denied her other allegations.

Gig Harbor attorney Terry Venneberg, representing Hendrickson, and Seattle attorney Suzanne Kelly Michael, representing Nichols, have not returned calls for comment this week.

In his order, Christel said the lawyers “shall come to the conference prepared with a reasonable plan to resolve and fully settle and are expected to participate in the settlement conference with a mindset, attitude and creative approach of being problem solvers.”

Christel ordered Venneberg and Michael to confer with him by phone about the case, also inviting Hendrickson and Nichols to do so, before Friday.

Christel ordered the lawyers to present “a candid summation” of both sides of the case, a history of past negotiations and “specific reasons why the case should settle.”

Persons must be present at the settlement conference “with full settlement authority,” Christel said.

In May, Settle postponed a trial set for Oct. 16 after Nichols said he would be too busy campaigning for re-election and Michael said she had a trial-scheduling conflict.

Hendrickson is seeking unspecified punitive damages, court costs and attorney’s fees.

The case has cost $171,183 for Nichols’ defense, according to county records.

The Washington Counties Risk Pool is covering Nichols’ legal expenses under a county policy that has a deductible of $100,000 per case, Sill said in an earlier interview.

________

Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 55650, or at pgottlieb@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

John Brewer.
Former editor and publisher of PDN dies

John Brewer, 76, was instrumental in community

Randy Perry and Judy Reandeau Stipe, volunteer executive director of Sequim Museum & Arts, hold aloft a banner from "The Boys in the Boat" film Perry purchased and is loaning to the museum. (Michael Dashiell/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
‘Boys in the Boat’ banner to be loaned to museum

Sequim man purchases item shown in film at auction

Charisse Deschenes, first hired by the city of Sequim in 2014, departed this week after 10 years in various roles, including most recently deputy city manager/community and economic development director. (City of Sequim)
Deputy manager leaves Sequim

Community, economic development position open

Hoko River project seeks salmon recovery and habitat restoration

Salmon coaltion takes lead in collaboration with Makah, Lower Elwha tribes

Clallam Transit’s zero-fare program off to successful start

Ridership is up and problems are down, general manager says

Motor rider airlifted to Seattle hospital after wreck

A Gig Harbor man was airlifted to a Seattle hospital… Continue reading

Traffic light project to begin Monday

Work crews from Titan Earthwork, LLC will begin a… Continue reading

From left to right are Indigo Gould, Hazel Windstorm, Eli Hill, Stuart Dow, Mateu Yearian and Hugh Wentzel.
Port Townsend Knowledge Bowl team wins consecutive state championships

The Knowledge Bowl team from Port Townsend High School has… Continue reading

Bob Edgington of 2 Grade LLC excavating, which donated its resources, pulls dirt from around the base of an orca sculpture at the Dream Playground at Erickson Playfield on Thursday during site preparation to rebuild the Port Angeles play facility, which was partially destroyed by an arson fire on Dec. 20. A community build for the replacement playground is scheduled for May 15-19 with numerous volunteer slots available. Signups are available at https://www.signupgenius.com/go/904084DA4AC23A5F85-47934048-dream#/. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Site preparation at Dream Playground

Bob Edgington of 2 Grade LLC excavating, which donated its resources, pulls… Continue reading

Rayonier Inc. is selling more than 115,000 acres in four units across the West Olympic Peninsula last week as the company looks to sell $1 billion worth of assets. (Courtesy photo / Rayonier Inc.)
Rayonier to sell West End timberland

Plans call for debt restructuring; bids due in June

Port Angeles port approves contract for Maritime Trade Center bid

Utilities installation, paving part of project at 18-acre site