Houston Chronicle

Ex-CDC director denies groping allegation

Public health leader for Obama arrested on sex abuse charge

- By Karen Matthews

NEW YORK — A former director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was accused of grabbing a woman’s behind and was arrested Friday on a sex abuse charge but said the woman’s allegation “does not reflect” who he is or the values he has.

Dr. Thomas Frieden was awaiting a court appearance on Friday in connection with what happened on Oct. 20, 2017, at his Brooklyn home, police said. The woman reported it in July, and he was taken into custody after an investigat­ion.

The accuser, a 55-year-old woman who knew Frieden, told police that he grabbed her buttocks. Frieden, who also is a former New York City health commission­er, is charged with forcible touching, sex abuse and harassment.

Frieden leads a health initiative called Resolve to Save Lives, which is housed by nonprofit global health organizati­on Vital Strategies.

“The allegation does not reflect Dr. Frieden’s public or private behavior or his values over a lifetime of service to improve health around the world,” said a statement issued by a spokesman on his behalf.

The president of Vital Strategies, Jose L. Castro, came out in support of Frieden. He said Frieden informed him in April that “a nonwork-related friend of his and his family of more than 30 years accused him of inappropri­ate physical contact.”

“I have known and worked closely with Dr. Frieden for nearly 30 years and have seen firsthand that he has the highest ethical standards both personally and profession­ally,” Castro said in a statement. “In all of my experience­s with him, there have never been any concerns or reports of inappropri­ate conduct.”

Nonetheles­s, earlier this month Vital Strategies hired an investigat­or to interview Resolve to Save Lives employees even though the woman didn’t work there. Castro said the investigat­ion found no inappropri­ate workplace behavior.

“Vital Strategies greatly values the work Dr. Frieden does to advance public health and he has my full confidence,” Castro said.

Frieden was a disease investigat­or at the Atlanta-based CDC, the nation’s top public health agency, in 1990 when he was assigned to New York City and worked on a large outbreak of drug-resistant tuberculos­is. He stayed, taking a job heading the city’s tuberculos­is control.

In 1996, he began working in India with the World Health Organizati­on on tuberculos­is control.

In 2009, President Barack Obama’s administra­tion picked Frieden to head the CDC. Frieden led U.S. public health efforts during a range of high-profile national and internatio­nal health crises, including pandemic flu, Ebola and Zika.

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