MCAD: Airline worker harassed BOSTON (AP) The Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination reportedly has found that a woman employee of Northwest Airlines was sexually harassed, and that the airline did not do enough to prevent it. The woman, Susan Taraskiewicz, was an equipment service chief in the airline's baggage area at Logan International Airport. She was killed Sept. 14, 1992, and her body was found in the trunk of a car. The slaying has not been solved. "Susan Taraskiewicz was subjected to a sexually hostile working environment while an employee at Northwest Airlines," the MCAD said in a finding prepared for release today, according to the Boston Herald. "Northwest was on notice of that harassment" and "failed to take adequate and appropriate action to alleviate and prevent this harassment the MCAD said. The ruling lists sexually explicit graffiti, taunts and prank calls aimed at women workers at the airline's baggage-handling facility. : It cites a journal kept by Taraskiewicz from Feb. 4, 1989, to Nov. 17, 1989, in which she logged incidents of sexual harassment. The reported harassment was corroborated by other workers. The MCAD said it did not have jurisdiction over a complaint that Northwest retaliated against Taraskiewicz, became the allegation was brought too late by her estate.