A former employee has filed a sexual discrimination complaint against the Falls County Sheriff’s Office and Falls County.

According to documents obtained by KWTX, the complaint was filed with the Texas Workforce Commission Civil Rights Division on Aug. 16.

The employee, whom KWTX has chosen not to identify for privacy reasons, alleges she was discriminated against because of her sex from March 4 to June 9, eventually leading to her resignation.

Falls County Sheriff Ricky Scaman, Falls County District Attorney Kathryn J. “Jody” Gilliam, and Falls County County Judge Jay T. Elliot had not returned calls for comment as of Wednesday night.

The complaint includes 31 pages of text messages between the woman and Scaman, her supervisor, who hired her in January.

“Shortly after beginning my employment in Falls County, Scaman began subjecting me to disparate and discriminatory treatment based on my sex,” the woman says in the complaint.

In the text messages included as exhibits with the complaint, Scaman asked her to supply him with a prostitute numerous times.

“BTW-where’s my damn hooker????” one text read.

The complaint shows more texts Scaman sent the woman asking for a ‘hooker’ on several other occasions, and in one response says, “Just remember……NO SURE FIRE WINNER = don’t come to work in the morning!”

The complaint alleges that other texts show Scaman pressured her for sex, asked for her to send him, and others including a state jail inspector, nude photographs, saying the jail might pass inspection if she did, (the Falls County Jail failed inspection in April), and threatened her employment if she did not comply.

“Maybe you should send those kinky naked pictures to him! He may pass us then” texts in the complaint stated.

“I’ll be a lot happier to deal with…..just think about it. Me happy at the office….no telling what the hell yall will get or do!” read another.

Scaman also referred to her as “princess” on multiple occasions, the complaint says.

“Come in here princess,” he said in one example via text.

The complaint also states Scaman subjected her to forced inappropriate physical contact in front of colleagues and treated her with a lower level of respect and dignity than her male colleagues.

She names five male employees who were treated more fairly than she was.

“These actions created a workplace that was full of discriminatory intimidation, ridicule, and insult so severe as to create a hostile and abusive work environment for me, both subjectively and as seen by a reasonable person,” she alleges in the complaint.

“In addition, said actions involved a supervisor that because of my sex subjected me to unwelcome conduct that affected a tangible aspect of my employment relationship, namely, my eventual constructive discharge as said actions made conditions so intolerable that I reasonable felt compelled to resign.”

This is at least the second sex scandal involving Scaman in recent years.

In 2011, a photograph surfaced of Scaman with a topless dancer while he was working on duty as an agent with the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission.

In addition to Scaman's firing, the photo is said to have lost him the 2012 Sheriff's race in Falls County.

However, he won the race in November of 2016, and as Sheriff-Elect, offered the complainant a position within his department later that month.

It’s unclear what, if any, monetary damages the former employee is requesting.

TWC officials would not comment on the complaint’s status.

“The Texas Workforce Commission cannot confirm or deny the existence of civil rights complaints or provide information on the status of investigations filed through the agency’s Civil Rights Division because all information provided to TWC through a civil rights complaint is confidential,” said Lisa Givens, Director of Communications, TWC Communications Department.