Houston Chronicle

USC agrees to pay $215M to settle doctor sex abuse claims

- By Amanda Lee Myers

LOS ANGELES — The University of Southern California said Friday that it would pay $215 million to settle claims of sexual abuse and harassment by a school gynecologi­st, but lawyers for hundreds of the accusers say it’s not enough money and the university has yet to fully disclose what it knew about the doctor’s behavior.

The tentative settlement, which needs a judge’s approval, will provide compensati­on ranging from $2,500 up to $250,000 to women who say Dr. George Tyndall abused them between 1988 and 2016, USC Interim President Wanda Austin said in a statement.

About 500 current and former students have made accusation­s against Tyndall and filed various lawsuits. They contend he routinely made crude comments, took inappropri­ate photos, forced them to strip naked and groped them under the guise of medical treatment.

The settlement specifical­ly applies to a pending federal class-action lawsuit that involves a fraction of the overall accusers but is open to every woman who had an appointmen­t with the gynecologi­st.

Three attorneys representi­ng nearly 300 alleged victims say they’re strongly advising their clients against joining the federal action so they can continue their fight in state court instead.

“The only guaranteed number in this case is $2,500 — $2,500 won’t even get you a 50-yard-line seat at a USC football game, let alone compensate somebody for being sexually assaulted by their doctor when they were 18 or 17,” said John Manly, an attorney who represents 180 accusers.

Attorney Gloria Allred, who represents 36 women who have accused Tyndall, said in a statement that the amount of money under the proposed settlement is “way too minimal.”

“In our opinion, for what some of the victims went through, this is a nuisance amount and may not properly compensate victims for what some of them have suffered,” she said.

Manly also criticized the proposed settlement as failing to hold USC accountabl­e and an effort to cap future monetary damages.

Tyndall spent about three decades as a USC staff gynecologi­st before retiring last year after a university investigat­ion concluded there was evidence he sexually harassed students during examinatio­ns.

Tyndall has denied the allegation­s and has not been charged with a crime. The Los Angeles police and the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office are reviewing allegation­s against him.

Under the proposed settlement, any woman who had an appointmen­t with Tyndall will get $2,500. Those who submit written claims detailing their allegation­s and the impact on their lives would be eligible for between $7,500 and $20,000. Women who agree to further detail their allegation­s in a private interview with a psychologi­st could see damages of up to $250,000.

On Thursday, 93 women who say Tyndall abused or harassed them announced the latest lawsuit against the university, saying it ignored decades of complaints.

 ?? Mark Ralston / AFP/Getty Images ?? The tentative settlement will compensate women who say Dr. George Tyndall abused them between 1988 and 2016.
Mark Ralston / AFP/Getty Images The tentative settlement will compensate women who say Dr. George Tyndall abused them between 1988 and 2016.

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