Houston Chronicle Sunday

Pilots say Michigan physician molested them, too

- By Ed White

DETROIT — A cargo pilot who regularly needed health checkups to keep his license contacted a University of Michigan doctor in 2000. He said he soon learned there was nothing routine about a visit with Robert Anderson.

He said Anderson told him to undress, put on a medical gown and get on a table, instead of simply checking the man’s vision, hearing and heart. He said the doctor touched his genitals and gave him a prostate exam.

“I was only 33; I probably didn’t need a prostate exam but I was naive,” the Ann Arbor-area man, now 53, said. “He examined my whole body like a dermatolog­ist might. It was very creepy. It was too much. I didn’t go back. … You’re not touching me again.” Anderson, who died in 2008, is at the center of a scandal at the University of Michigan, where he’s accused of molesting hundreds of young men over decades, especially campus athletes who saw him for exams. It’s been a year since the university acknowledg­ed the “disturbing” claims and said a law firm would investigat­e.

Since then, another category of victims has emerged: pilots in southeaste­rn Michigan who needed physicals to get or maintain a license.

For 40 years, Anderson was designated by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion as a medical examiner in the region. It meant pilots, air traffic controller­s and others who were required to have health exams could make an appointmen­t with him.

Anderson set his rates and had no financial relationsh­ip with the FAA. He proudly defended his skills when another doctor complained that he was performing too many exams and not grounding many pilots.

“I schedule two exams a day and two extra on Thursday evenings and three on Saturday,” he told the FAA in 1973. “This quite comfortabl­y handles over 750 a year, if desired. … I have not approached this number, as your records will show.”

Anderson said he believed in a “complete examinatio­n.”

“A few have left me because they have desired less of a physical exam than I am willing to give,” he said.

People in aviation don’t have to step forward yet to become part of a likely class-action settlement with the university. But some already have joined the many lawsuits against the university by former students.

A pilot said he was molested for Anderson’s sexual gratificat­ion in 1988. Another pilot said in the same lawsuit that he suffered physically and emotionall­y as a result of abuse in 2001.

Lawyers who are suing the university are focusing on evidence that campus officials years ago were aware of allegation­s against Anderson. A supervisor, Tom Easthope, testified in a deposition last summer that he went to fire Anderson in the late 1970s after learning he was “fooling around with boys.” The doctor resigned as director of the university’s Health Service but continued to see athletes and others until 2003.

The university has expressed a willingnes­s to settle cases out of court. A federal judge appointed a mediator to work with all sides, a process that will last months.

A Jan. 28 court filing said there are possibly more than 850 victims, which would exceed the number of women and girls who were part of a $500 million settlement with Michigan State University over abuse by sports doctor Larry Nassar. Ohio State University has paid more than $45 million to 185 people who said they were groped by Richard Strauss, another sports doctor.

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