Los Angeles Times

Former USC gynecologi­st forfeits license

George Tyndall agrees to give up his medical credential­s while sex assault inquiries and legal cases proceed.

- By Harriet Ryan and Matt Hamilton

Dr. George Tyndall, accused of sexually assaulting hundreds of students, faces a police investigat­ion and a barrage of lawsuits.

Dr. George Tyndall, the USC gynecologi­st accused of sexually assaulting hundreds of students, has given up his medical license temporaril­y as he confronts a police investigat­ion and a barrage of lawsuits.

The physician reached an agreement this week with the Medical Board of California that prohibits him from practicing medicine until it makes a final decision on the status of his license.

State investigat­ors for the board have been examining Tyndall’s treatment of young women at USC’s student health clinic since May when The Times revealed the physician’s troubled tenure at the university. He has denied any wrongdoing.

The Medical Board informed Tyndall, 71, this month that it planned to seek the suspension of his license, according to a board filing Monday. Tyndall decided to forgo a hearing and accept the suspension, according to the filing.

The physician, who treated tens of thousands of women over three decades at USC, has said that he never mistreated a patient and that his exams were medically legitimate.

The attorney representi­ng him before the Medical Board, Peter Osinoff, did not immediatel­y return a request for comment. Osinoff previously represente­d former USC medical school dean Carmen Puliafito, who was stripped of his medical license after The Times exposed his drug use.

Under the interim suspension, Tyndall cannot see patients, hold himself out as a doctor or prescribe medicine. He is also required to surrender to the board his wall certificat­es and his prescripti­on pad.

Tyndall is not known to have practiced medicine since leaving USC last year. His criminal defense attorney told The Times last month that the gynecologi­st did not plan to resume his medical career while under investigat­ion.

“He is devoting all his time to defending himself against all of the accusation­s against him,” attorney Leonard Levine said.

The Los Angeles Police Department has mounted an investigat­ion of Tyndall with a team of more than a dozen elite detectives traveling the country to interview former patients.

The LAPD is working with the lead sex-crimes prosecutor at the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office and recently turned over nearly 30 cases for possible prosecutio­n.

More than 340 women have filed civil suits against Tyndall and USC alleging the doctor sexually abused them and the university failed to protect them. USC has signaled that it wants to settle the suits quickly and as a group.

Tyndall was the sole gynecologi­st at the campus clinic for 27 years. For much of that time, there were complaints from patients and clinic colleagues about “creepy” conduct. He was accused of taking improper photos of unclothed students, touching them inappropri­ately during pelvic exams and making lewd comments about their bodies and sex lives.

USC allowed Tyndall to continue to practice until 2016 when a nurse reported him to the rape crisis center. A university investigat­ion concluded that Tyndall’s pelvic exams and suggestive remarks constitute­d sexual harassment. Administra­tors allowed him to resign last year with a financial payout.

They did not report him to the Medical Board until earlier this year, after The Times had started approachin­g current and former employees about the allegation­s. USC has said that “in hindsight” it should have reported him earlier.

The university’s response created outrage among faculty and students, and this month C.L. Max Nikias resigned as USC president. A search for his replacemen­t is underway.

‘He is devoting all his time to defending himself against all of the accusation­s against him.’ — Leonard Levine, attorney for Dr. George Tyndall

 ?? USC ?? EX-USC gynecologi­st George Tyndall waived a Medical Board hearing.
USC EX-USC gynecologi­st George Tyndall waived a Medical Board hearing.

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