By Dan Levine
(Reuters) - Ellen Pao, a former partner at Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield and Byers, sought a $2.7 million settlement after a jury rejected her claims that the venture capital firm discriminated against her, according to a court filing on Friday.
A San Francisco jury cleared Kleiner Perkins in March of claims it short-circuited Pao's career because she is a woman, a case that helped spark a wide discussion about gender at the centre of the U.S. technology industry. Pao has said she will appeal.
After the verdict, Kleiner sought to recover about $973,000 in litigation costs from Pao, a figure Pao claims is unwarranted. Kleiner offered to waive its costs request if Pao chose not to appeal.
In a court filing on Friday, Kleiner said Pao offered after the verdict to drop the case for $2.7 million. Kleiner spokeswoman Christina Lee said the firm "has no intention of accepting this unreasonable demand."
A spokeswoman for Pao declined to comment. The $2.7 million figure was earlier reported by tech website Re/code.