Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

» UW-Oshkosh:

He says case related to UW action against Oshkosh chancellor

- KAREN HERZOG

A former University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh baseball coach asks to reopen lawsuits that were dismissed against four university administra­tors.

A former baseball coach at the University of WisconsinO­shkosh is asking both a Winnebago County judge and a federal judge to reopen lawsuits they dismissed against four university administra­tors in light of what he calls new evidence against the former chancellor and former chief business officer.

The former coach, Tom Lechnir, said new evidence that surfaced last week could validate his legal claim that he lost his job because he blew the whistle on former Chancellor Richard Wells for allegedly diverting private gifts earmarked for a new baseball stadium to another building project — the Oshkosh Sports Complex — without informing the donors. His attorneys are seeking to reopen lawsuits in Winnebago County Circuit Court in Oshkosh and U.S. District Court in Green Bay.

The state Department of Justice, which successful­ly defended Wells and former chief business officer Thomas Sonnleitne­r in Lechnir’s lawsuits, is now suing Wells and Sonnleitne­r on behalf of the UW System, presenting a conflict for handling both. The Department of Justice has referred Lechnir’s cases against Wells and Sonnleitne­r to Gov. Scott Walker’s office, requesting outside counsel be appointed to represent them, a Department of Justice spokesman said Wednesday.

“We certainly understand that there is a conflict,” spokesman Johnny Koremenos said.

Last week, the UW System filed its own civil lawsuit against Wells and Sonnleitne­r, alleging they illegally promised state money to back loans on several high-profile building projects — including the Oshkosh Sports Complex — if the university’s private supporting foundation became overextend­ed and couldn’t make its debt payments. Further, the two are accused of making illegal money transfers from the university to the private foundation to help make those projects happen.

The motion Lechnir’s attorneys filed to reopen his state case after UW System filed its lawsuit notes: “The Sports Complex — and its mismanaged finances — was the very same project for which Lechnir claimed he was being used as a scapegoat by Wells.”

The motion in the federal case says Wells set up Lechnir to take the fall for problems financing the athletic complex. Among the new evidence it cites is the UW System’s own statement against Wells and Sonnleitne­r released last week when it sued them: “This is both unacceptab­le and appalling,” the UW statement said. “Dr. Wells and Mr. Sonnleitne­r were top personnel who were far afield from the rules and statutes that govern university operations.”

The private, nonprofit UWOshkosh Foundation was created to provide support to the university, so funding should have flowed only from the foundation to the university. The state constituti­on and UW System policies do not allow a public entity to support a private organizati­on, and campuses have strict rules that prevent university executives from being in decisionma­king roles on behalf of foundation­s.

Lechnir lost his job after Wells accused him of being responsibl­e for and failing to repay debt on the new baseball stadium — debt Lechnir said was fabricated because money Lechnir raised for the baseball stadium was quietly diverted to the Oshkosh Sports Complex. Wells also cited low academic performanc­e of student athletes and failure to meet his administra­tive responsibi­lities as a coach.

Lechnir’s contract was not renewed in 2013, shortly after Wells leveled the accusation­s against him. Lechnir at that time also received the first substandar­d performanc­e evaluation of his 31-year career, including six years as an assistant coach, from athletic director Darryl Sims.

The former coach led the Titans to the 1994 NCAA Division III championsh­ip and compiled a 728-292-1 record over 25 seasons. His teams appeared nine times in the Division III World Series and won 12 Wisconsin Intercolle­giate Athletic Conference titles.

While the foundation raised money for constructi­on of the Oshkosh Sports Complex, UWOshkosh owns it. Lechnir said he personally raised money from donors to pay off all the con-

struction bills on the baseball stadium, though the donations would have been sent through the foundation.

The Oshkosh Sports Complex is used by multiple university sports teams. According to the UW System’s lawsuit, Wells and Sonnleitne­r authorized five transfers of university funds to the foundation for the sports complex project totaling $806,000 between June 2011 and April 2013. None of those funds has been repaid, the lawsuit says.

Lechnir’s attorneys, William McKinley and Jason Wied, filed the motions to reopen his lawsuit against Wells, Sonnleitne­r, Sims and former Vice Chancellor Petra Roter last Thursday — the day after the UW System filed suit against Wells and Sonnleitne­r.

The five projects Wells and Sonnleitne­r are accused of mishandlin­g in the UW System lawsuit were led by the UW-Oshkosh Foundation. That lawsuit alleges more than $11 million in total was transferre­d from the university to the foundation in violation of state law.

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