West Virginia
WSAZ Investigates | Unheard
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (WSAZ) – She was a rising star at the West Virginia Department of Transportation.
Shawna, who has chosen not to reveal her last name or show her face on camera, started her career at the West Virginia Department of Transportation in 2019 as a secretary working for one of the district engineers.
In 2020, she was promoted to executive assistant to the number two of the agency, Alan Reed, the West Virginia State Highway Engineer. It was a job she considered a dream come true.
“I considered that an absolute honor and everything that I handled, it’s an honor you take it very serious every phone call you get with a concerned citizen, whether it’s a pothole needing fixed or they’re just needing a phone call, return,” said Shawna in a sit down interview with WSAZ’s Sarah Sager.
From there, accolades for her work started rolling in.
Shawna received a couple of awards, including Employee of the Year in 2022.
However, that same year Shawna says behind the scenes that dream had been turning into a nightmare.
SAGER: “How do you get from Vision Award, and Employee of the Year to where we’re sitting in 2024?”
SHAWNA: “I can’t answer that. I don’t know. It hurts.”
Shawna says starting in 2021 she endured inappropriate behavior from her supervisor – former WV State Highway Engineer, Alan Reed.
SAGER: “When did things start to change because seems like at that time, you were pretty happy and things were going well, you were continuing to draw, when did things shift?”
SHAWNA: “You know, Sarah, looking back, in hindsight I would say it was it was probably, you know, right away. If you look at text, there was some some difference in texting honestly. But when it was about a year, year and a half later, I really started noticing the differences.”
SAGER: “So you’re seeing this shift, maybe like March or so of 2021. Things are changing within the department. Are you also feeling a shift with within your personal workspace with the people that you’re interacting with?”
SHAWNA: “Most definitely – more specifically with with Mr. Reed. There’s a lot of personal, a lot of personal text. A lot of late night early morning text. A lot of physical touch. Just a lot of intimacy, to be honest, if you want to call it that.”
SAGER: “When you say physical, this became a physical encounter for him, was he touching you? Did things cross the line?”
SHAWNA: “Absolutely.”
SAGER: “Can you give me an example?”
SHAWNA: “It’s tough to talk about. It’s even more tough to tell you.”
Shawna went on to describe several instances she says made her uncomfortable in the office and work trips where she says Reed would cross the line.
SHAWNA: “I would travel with him. He has a state car. And there would be trips that he would place his hand within the inner part of my thigh. That would be about the extent of that, but extremely uncomfortable. Is that what a supervisor does to an employee? And I mean in any job, but is that what I expected my executive branch state leader to be? Absolutely not.”
In 2022, it was on two of those trips that Shawna says things escalated further.
Shawna says on a trip to Biloxi, Mississippi, Reed got a key card and got into her hotel room while she was sleeping.
Then, at a DOT Human Resources conference held at Pipestem Resort in early October 2020, Shawna says Reed grabbed her leaving bruises seen here on her arm.
Shawna says that incident was the breaking point.
After she returned from the conference, Shawna says she went directly to the head of the department, West Virginia Transportation Secretary Jimmy Wriston – who is also Alan Reed’s cousin.
SHAWNA: “I remember telling him he’s my supervisor. I think I said that like three or four times, but he’s my supervisor. I was trying to say he can’t do this. He’s my supervisor. You know, he thinks there’s a relationship. He’s my supervisor. I’m not comfortable in this. He’s my supervisor. And that’s when he said let me have a talk with him. He’s off Friday. Then he waited until I got back to my office and said, “Go home early today. Hang in there kiddo.”
Shawna says she was off work the following Monday. When she returned to work Tuesday, she went to Secretary Wriston for an update.
SHAWNA: “He said to give the situation two weeks and he had a stern talk with him over the weekend.”
SAGER: “What were the two weeks? What did he expect to change?”
SHAWNA: “I have no idea. I didn’t ask. That’s when I just felt sick when he said that. I wanted to say, “What do you really expect me to do?”. Do you know what’s already happened today?”
Shawna says at that point she filed a report with the State of West Virginia’s Equal Employment Opportunity Office on October 13th hoping to get help there.
However, the response from the head of the department of transportation just didn’t sit right with her.
SAGER: “Secretary Wriston took no action? Even moving your desk? Or putting you in another place?”
SHAWNA: “Nothing.”
WSAZ confirmed Reed was not suspended until November 3, 2022 – almost four weeks after Shawna says she took the issues to Secretary Wriston.
WSAZ’S Sarah Sager emailed, called and left a messages with Secretary Wriston to see why there was no immediate suspension or any action taken.
Secretary Wriston did not answer or return her calls or emails.
Sager also called Reed to speak with him about the allegations. He did answer her call, but would only say, “He had no comment”, and, “He did not know what she was talking about”.
What we do know is that according to a West Virginia EEO document, Shawna had a right to a decision within 70 working days of her complaint being assigned to investigators.
That paperwork was signed by Shawna and a West Virginia State Investigator on October 13, 2022.
If you check the calendar, 70 working days later was January 27, 2023 – the same day Alan Reed submitted a letter stating he was retiring effective January 31, 2023.
We also know Shawna was supposed to be notified if her case was substantiated or not substantiated, according to a West Virginia EEO complaint form found online.
SAGER: “With your EEO report, we read through the documentation and know that you were supposed to be notified if the case had been substantiated or not substantiated. Were you ever told either way?”
SHAWNA: “No, I was not.”
Sager reached out to the State of West Virginia Department of Administration which did oversee the EEO office, to find out why Shawna never received any information. A communications director told Sager the EEO office was actually disbanded in June of 2022 – months before Shawna filled out forms that all have EEO written on them.
That same communications officials told Sager that, that office does not and did not make determinations regarding the substantiation of complaints. The communication official even went on to say, “To the extent that she expected a determination from the Office of Equal Opportunity Office, her understanding of the process was mistaken.”
However, the state’s own website and voicemail tells a much different story.
The office that took over for West Virginia’s Equal Employment Opportunity office is now called the Office of Equal Opportunity, but when you call, the voicemail for that office still says EEO.
The State of West Virginia’s Office of Equal Opportunity’s website is also full of references to EEO.
Until Monday January 22, 2024, there were even links to the same complaint form Shawna filled out in October of 2022. That complaint form has now been taken down, and the link goes to an error message.
And remember how a state communications official said they do not and never have made determinations about substantiation of complaints?
WSAZ found a 2020 West Virginia Equal Employment Opportunity Office’s annual report found online shows otherwise. It breaks down the number of complaints, and how many were substantiated. The link to that 2020 WV EEO Annual Report now goes to an error page, but WSAZ saved that report before it was taken down. You can see it here.
Sager asked for clarification, but no one from the state will call or email us back.
With no answers from the state, Shawna tells us she did retain a lawyer who put the state on notice that she planned to file a lawsuit against the West Virginia Department of Transportation, Reed, and Secretary Wriston. However, that lawsuit was never filed, because the State of West Virginia settled.
Through a Freedom of Information Request, WSAZ obtained the settlement which shows the State of West Virginia paid Shawna hundreds of thousands of dollars to drop her claims against the Department of Transportation, Secretary Wriston, and Reed. The state’s attorneys also tried to get Shawna to sign an agreement not to disclose the terms of her settlement, but Shawna wouldn’t do it.
Shawna says while she tries to move on from the situation, she just wants change for other employees.
SHAWNA: “It hurts, but all I can tell you is that’s why I’m here talking with you today. All of this has taken things from me and I don’t want anybody to ever have to endure what I’ve done. If you see something, say something, stand up for your colleagues. Stand up as a woman, that government any job you work in and know that no, not okay. No means no. Stand up for yourself.”
Copyright 2024 WSAZ. All rights reserved.
West Virginia
This week in West Virginia history: April 19-25
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — The following events happened on these dates in West Virginia history, compiled by the West Virginia Humanities Council from its online encyclopedia, e-WV.
April 19, 1896: Writer Melville Davisson Post was born in Harrison County. His best-known works are the Randolph Mason series, published in three volumes, and the more successful collection Uncle Abner: Master of Mysteries.
April 19, 1902: Author Jean Lee Latham was born in Buckhannon. She wrote a number of children’s books, including Carry On, Mr. Bowditch, which won the 1956 Newbery Award.
April 20, 1823: Gen. Jesse Lee Reno was born in Wheeling. He graduated from West Point in 1846 with another cadet from western Virginia, Thomas J. Jackson, later known as “Stonewall.” Reno was the highest-ranking officer from present West Virginia killed in the Civil War.
April 20, 1863: President Abraham Lincoln issued a proclamation that in 60 days, West Virginia would become a state. The occasion was marked 100 years later during the state’s Centennial celebration with a special ceremonial session of the West Virginia Legislature on April 20, 1963, in Wheeling.
April 20, 1909: Fiddler Melvin Wine was born near Burnsville in Braxton County. A favorite of old-time music enthusiasts nationally, he was chosen as a National Heritage Fellow in 1991 by the National Endowment for the Arts — the highest recognition given to a folk artist in the United States.
April 20, 1939: Poet Irene McKinney was born in Belington, Barbour County. Gov. Gaston Caperton appointed her state poet laureate in 1993, and she served in that capacity until her death in 2012.
April 21, 1908: Musician Phoeba Cottrell Parsons was born in Calhoun County. Parsons’ traditional clawhammer banjo style, unaccompanied ballad singing, riddles and storytelling have influenced countless younger musicians.

April 21, 1936: President Franklin Roosevelt established the Jefferson National Forest. The West Virginia portion of the forest includes about 19,000 acres in Monroe County.
April 22, 1908: Marshall “Little Sleepy” Glenn was born in Elkins. Glenn coached basketball at West Virginia University from 1934 to 1938 and football from 1937 to 1940. He was inducted into the WVU Sports Hall of Fame in 1992.
April 22, 1948: Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter and musician Larry Groce was born in Dallas, Texas. He is best known as the longtime host and artistic director of the Mountain Stage radio program.
April 22, 2003: Activist Judy Bonds, a Raleigh County native, received the Goldman Environmental Prize for her fight against mountaintop removal mining. Her efforts inspired thousands and turned a local West Virginia issue into a national cause.

April 23, 1857: Andrew S. Rowan was born in Gap Mills, Monroe County. Rowan, a military officer, was chosen as the messenger when President William McKinley wanted to send a message to Cuban Gen. Calixto Garcia during the Spanish-American War. The 1899 pamphlet A Message to Garcia made the incident famous.
April 24, 1865: McNeill’s Rangers surrendered to Union troops at New Creek — now Keyser. The Confederate guerrilla force probably never numbered more than 100 men at any time but managed to inflict regular damage on Union operations.
April 25, 1863: In what became known as the Jones-Imboden Raid, about 1,500 Confederate soldiers under Gen. William “Grumble” Jones advanced through Greenland Gap, a deep pass through New Creek Mountain in present Grant County. The Confederates encountered 87 Union soldiers who held off several assaults before finally surrendering.
April 25, 1923: Union leader Arnold Ray Miller was born at Leewood on Cabin Creek in Kanawha County. In December 1972, he defeated Tony Boyle to become president of the United Mine Workers and served until 1979.

e-WV is a project of the West Virginia Humanities Council. For more information, contact the council at 1310 Kanawha Blvd. E., Charleston, WV 25301, call 304-346-8500 or visit wvencyclopedia.org.
West Virginia
The 2026 WVU Tommy Nickolich Award Goes to a Parkersburg Native
During the Gold-Blue spring game on Saturday, the West Virginia coaching staff named wide receiver Cyrus Traught the recipient of the 2026 Tommy Nikolich Award.
The award, which is always given out at the end of spring ball, recognizes a walk-on team member who has distinguished himself through his attitude and work ethic. The award is presented in memory of Tommy Nickolich, a former WVU player (1980-82) who passed away from cancer in 1983.
Traugh is a Parkersburg native and graduate of Parkersburg South High School. He began his career at Youngstown State before transferring back home to play for the Mountaineers last season. In his final year with the Penguins, he logged 36 receptions, 409 yards, and a team-leading five touchdowns, two of which came against Pitt.
During the 2025 campaign with the Mountaineers, he saw action against Robert Morris and Kansas, playing 10 snaps against the Jayhawks, but did not record any stats.
Head coach Rich Rodriguez has mentioned him twice this spring as someone who has been doing some good things and making progress. Wide receivers coach Ryan Garrett also showed him some love during his press conference last week.
The Mountaineers completely revamped the wide receiver room this offseason, upping the level of talent at both inside and outside receiver spots, but perhaps Traugh can work his way into the mix if he puts together a strong summer and fall camp. If he’s not a regular in the rotation, he’ll serve as a quality depth piece who can play special teams.
Past Nickolich Award winners:
2025: Clay Ash, RB
2024: Avery Wilcox, S
2023: C.J. Cole, WR
2022: Nick Malone, OL
2021: Graeson Malashevich, WR/H
2020: Osman Kamara, S
2019: Jake Abbott, LB
2018: Evan Staley, K
2017: Nick Meadows, LS
2016: Jon Lewis, DL
2015: Justin Arndt, LB
2014: Michael Calicchio, OL
2013: Connor Arlia, WR
2012: Tyler Anderson, DE
2011: Ryan Nehlen, WR
2010: Matt Lindamood, FB
2009: Josh Taylor, DL
2008: Adam Hughes, LS
2007: Andy Emery, LB
2006: Tim Lindsey, LS
2005: George Shehl, H/DB
2004: Jeff Noechel, LB
2003: John Pennington, WR
2002: Moe Fofana, RB
2001: Jeremy Knapp, TE
2000: Ben Collins, LB
1999: Bryan Lorenz, LB
1998: Mark Corman, TE
1997: David Lightcap, DB
1996: Matt Ceresa, OL
1995: Rob Keys, DB
1994: Randy Fulmore, DB
1993: Matt McCulty, WR
1992: Brett Parise, WR, Ray Wilcox, LB
1991: Keith Taparausky, RB
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