Chicago Sun-Times

LAWSUIT: CLEMENTE H. S. COACH KEPT JOB AFTER SEX COMPLAINTS

- BY ANDY GRIMM Staff Reporter Email: agrimm@suntimes.com Twitter: @agrimm34

Administra­tors at Roberto Clemente High School had received complaints about inappropri­ate behavior by a longtime coach and local school council member before the man was arrested for allegedly groping a student nearly a year ago, according to lawsuit filed Monday by two teenage students.

Former girls volleyball and swimming coach Casino Cruz is expected to stand trial on Dec. 27 on misdemeano­r battery charges, after a 14- year- old girl said he “inappropri­ately touched” her thigh on an escalator inside the campus.

Cruz was suspended after his arrest, but a lawsuit filed on behalf of two Clemente freshmen claims school officials could have acted years earlier.

Monday, the parents of two 14- year- old girls filed a civil lawsuit against the coach and the Chicago Board of Education, claiming that the district failed to act even after multiple reports about inappropri­ate behavior by Cruz surfaced, including a 2003 arrest for touching a female student on the swim team. Students also made complaints about Cruz to teachers at Clemente in 2012 and 2014, the lawsuit states.

“The Board of Ed has been on notice for a long time, since 2003 and as recently as 2014 that Mr. Cruz is a danger and a predator… and he has been allowed to remain at the school, acting as security guard, as volleyball coach and dean,” said attorney John Perkaus.

Cruz’s criminal attorney, Adam Altman, said the allegation­s against Cruz are false. Altman said Cruz is a graduate of the Northwest Side school and had worked there “for decades.” Cruz was arrested in 2003, but the charges were dismissed, Altman said.

“He was entrenched in the community, where he grew up,” Altman said. “He was dedicated to helping students at the school where he grew up.”

The lawsuit states a female student in 2012 reported to a teacher that she had been sexually harassed by Cruz, and that nothing happened even after that teacher went to school administra­tors. In 2014, another student claimed to have been “physically abused” by Cruz, and school administra­tors again did nothing, the lawsuit states.

One plaintiff in the civil lawsuit was a freshman during the 2016- 2017 school year, while Cruz was a dean and girls volleyball coach. On three occasions between September and December, the lawsuit states Cruz touched the girl’s body “in an insulting, provoking, improper and sexual nature.” The girl last December reported the incidents to a teacher, who in turn alerted administra­tors.

The same month, another freshman girl also reported unwanted touching by the coach, and her allegation­s became the basis for the criminal charges Cruz is now facing. The lawsuit alleges school officials knew about the past complaints against Cruz and of his history of inappropri­ate behavior.

The lawsuit claims Cruz used his position as a dean, who could remove students from class at will, and as a coach to “groom” girls for abuse.

“Cruz routinely tested the boundaries of female students with seemingly innocuous acts such as hugging or ‘ accidental­ly’ touching a student in an inappropri­ate manner or place,” the lawsuit states, following with a list of purported “grooming” behaviors that includes hugging female students “tightly, touching teens in their swimsuits and “excessive touching” of volleyball players while in uniform.

 ?? | SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Students arrive at Roberto Clemente High School in Chicago on the first day of school in September 2014.
| SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO Students arrive at Roberto Clemente High School in Chicago on the first day of school in September 2014.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States