Chattanooga Times Free Press

Michigan St. keeps president, to issue $500 million bond

- BY ALICE YIN

EAST LANSING, Mich. — Michigan State University’s embattled interim president survived an attempted ouster from the school’s governing board Friday as trustees met to approve using a bond to finance a $500 million settlement with hundreds of women and girls who said they were sexually assaulted by sports doctor Larry Nassar.

At the meeting’s outset, trustee Brian Mosallam tried to change the agenda and allow a vote to fire John Engler, who had disparaged accusers and their lawyers in emails. The audience rejoiced, but the board voted 6-2 against taking up the issue, with Mossallam and Dianne Byrum the only trustees voting in favor.

Engler has faced a whirlwind of backlash since the emails surfaced last week. At one point he wrote that Rachael Denholland­er, one of Nassar’s most outspoken accusers, probably received a “kickback” from her attorney. Within days, the controvers­y crested in some 150 Nassar accusers demanding his departure before he apologized in a written statement on Thursday.

“I didn’t give it the considerat­ion it warranted,” he wrote. “That was a big mistake. I was wrong. I apologize.”

Denholland­er said Thursday she appreciate­d Engler’s gesture but remains convinced he cannot lead the university.

After Mosallam’s Friday motion faltered, Kaylee Lorincz, another Nassar accuser, began the public comment section by urging trustees against hiring Robert Young as the university’s general counsel. She said that during mediation for the $500 million settlement, he had responded to a plaintiff attorney’s inquiry on whether he would apologize to Nassar’s victims with, “Why would I do that?”

“Bob Young will only contribute to the current culture at MSU where victims are blamed and shamed and not taken seriously,” she said.

The board voted 5-3 in favor Young’s contract later Friday, with trustees Mosallam, Byrum and Dan Kelly in the minority. The deal will dole him a nearly $1.3 million salary over three years.

Lorincz, who alleged in a previous board meeting that Engler was trying to pay her off without her lawyer’s input, ended her Friday speech with, “By the way Mr. Engler, I’m still waiting for my apology.” Engler has said he remembered the events differentl­y.

She was followed by several others Nassar accusers, all describing the emotional hurt they say Engler has inflicted on them.

“I would like to assure President Engler right off the bat that I am here on my absolute own accord, and I’m not receiving kickbacks for this,” Morgan McCaul said, to applause. “Do what’s right. Fire John Engler.”

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