Dayton Daily News

More suits over OSU doc sex abuse are dismissed

- By Kantele Franko

A federal judge COLUMBUS — on Monday dismissed more of the unsettled lawsuits filed by men who say Ohio State University failed to stop sexual abuse decades ago by now-deceased team doctor Richard Strauss.

U.S. District Court Judge Michael Watson’s latest rulings weren’t much of a surprise, given how he’d previously dismissed similar cases for the same reasons. Watson has said it’s clear Strauss abused hundreds of young men while Ohio State officials turned a blind eye, but he ruled the legal window for such claims has passed.

“The Court hopes that, notwithsta­nding the Court’s ruling on the statute of limitation­s issue and fact that Ohio State’s voluntary settlement program has closed, Ohio State will stand by its promise to ‘do the right thing,’ and continue settlement discussion­s with Plaintiffs,” Watson wrote Monday.

Asked for comment on that, Ohio State spokespers­on Benjamin Johnson said by email that the school is reviewing the judge’s newest decisions. The university previously noted it already reached settlement­s with more than 230 men.

In all, Watson has dismissed unresolved cases brought by more than 300 men. Many of those or their lawyers said they’ll appeal.

OSU has repeated a commitment to uncovering the truth of what happened, and has publicly offered apologies for anyone abused by Strauss. The school reached nearly $47 million in settlement­s with 185 survivors — an average of about $252,000 — and then separately offered plaintiffs in certain remaining lawsuits an individual settlement program that has since ended.

But some of the men whose cases had remained unsettled weren’t given an opportunit­y to mediate their cases or participat­e in the individual settlement­s, according to Richard Schulte, an attorney who said he had dozens of clients in that situation.

“We are at a loss to understand why OSU wants to compensate some and exclude others . ... OSU chose to single them out and revictimiz­e them, effectivel­y telling them being raped and molested is worth nothing compared to those who were offered a settlement,” Schulte said by email Monday. “This is a sad day for the OSU Alumni we represent. We are still hopeful OSU will treat them fairly and offer settlement.”

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