Los Angeles Times

USC marchers rally for women

Marchers at USC show support for accusers of former campus gynecologi­st.

- By Brittny Mejia brittny.mejia@latimes.com

Participan­ts gather to support those who have accused a former gynecologi­st of sexual misconduct.

A small group of current and former students gathered on the USC campus on Saturday for a march to show support for the women who have accused a former university gynecologi­st of sexual misconduct and to call for an investigat­ion of campus officials who were complicit in his alleged misdeeds.

The crowd of mostly women gathered outside the Engemann Student Health Center, where Dr. George Tyndall was allowed to treat students for nearly 30 years. From there, they marched to the center of the sprawling campus south of downtown.

Ariel Sobel, 22, one of the organizers of the march, told the group that the purpose of the march was to draw attention to the women who complained about Tyndall’s suspected behavior over the years and went ignored. “These were real human beings, with real stories,” she said.

As the group marched toward the statue of Tommy Trojan, the university’s mascot of a sword-wielding warrior that stands in the school’s central plaza, a chant rose up: “What do we want? Justice! When do we want it? Now!”

One woman, a USC student who asked that she not be named for fear of retaliatio­n, said she had been a patient of Tyndall’s around 2010. “My experience of him was an extremely creepy vibe. I saw him once and was like, I’m never going back to see that person,” she said. “I’m really upset that it took the L.A. Times for me to learn, eight years later, that this person had a history” of sexual misconduct allegation­s that had been reported.

The Times first reported on the allegation­s against Tyndall in May. More than 400 women have contacted a university hotline to address concerns about the physician since then. Tyndall is accused of improperly photograph­ing students’ genitals, touching women inappropri­ately during pelvic examinatio­ns and making sexually suggestive remarks.

The Los Angeles Police Department is investigat­ing at least 52 complaints of misconduct involving Tyndall, and more than two dozen former patients have sued the doctor and the university in recent weeks.

The university did not inform Tyndall’s patients or report him at the time to the Medical Board of California, the agency responsibl­e for protecting the public from problem doctors.

Tyndall has denied wrongdoing in previous interviews with The Times. In a letter to the newspaper dated May 17, the physician said he had heard of only one patient complaint before March 2016: an allegation that he did not wear gloves during a pelvic exam. He wrote that the claim was debunked by administra­tors. “Patients sometimes fabricate stories,” Tyndall wrote.

He continued to practice at USC until 2016, when a report from a nurse led to his suspension. An internal USC investigat­ion determined Tyndall’s behavior during pelvic exams was outside the scope of current medical practice and amounted to sexual harassment of students. He resigned quietly last summer with a financial payout.

Saturday, speakers included Elizabeth Reyes, interim director at the Relationsh­ip and Sexual Violence Prevention and Services program at USC, who discussed resources available to potential victims as well as reporting options on the student health center website.

Also in attendance was attorney Gloria Allred, who filed a lawsuit against the university on behalf of one student who said she felt “violated” during a 2016 exam. Allred said the lawsuit will be amended to add more than 20 young women “who are going to have the courage to stand up and say USC has to be accountabl­e.”

“We are not going to stop until justice is done,” she said.

Viva Symanski, who is also being represente­d by Allred, alleged Tyndall touched her inappropri­ately and asked repeatedly about her sex life during a January 2014 appointmen­t. “Visibility has not been easy. Choosing to speak here today was not easy,” Symanski said, her voice breaking. “But I draw strength from the courageous women who came before — women that stood up to authority in meager numbers, women that were not heard, women that were not believed. We are at a breaking point. Things have to change, USC must change.”

The fallout from the Tyndall scandal, coupled with past revelation­s in The Times about rampant drug use by former USC Dr. Carmen A. Puliafito, led to the resignatio­n of USC President C.L. Max Nikias last month.

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? ATTORNEY Gloria Allred, center, joins others Saturday at USC in a march over the scandal involving a former university gynecologi­st, Dr. George Tyndall.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ATTORNEY Gloria Allred, center, joins others Saturday at USC in a march over the scandal involving a former university gynecologi­st, Dr. George Tyndall.

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