The Columbus Dispatch

DAMAGES

- Dispatch reporter Bill Rabinowitz and Public Affairs Editor Darrel Rowland contribute­d to this story. jwehrman@dispatch.com @JessicaWeh­rman jsmola@dispatch.com @jennsmola

DiSabato wrote. “Our intent is to expeditiou­sly reach a negotiated settlement, without conflict, that compensate­s the victims for the trauma they have suffered because of this sex abuse, deals with the individual that knew of this situation, but chose to do nothing about it, and corrects the atmosphere that may still exist at OSU, and therefore would allow this to happen again in the future.”

The email was circulated to media outlets by sports agent Bret Adams, who has been critical of DiSabato and coverage of his allegation­s in the press. He has sued DiSabato for defamation, slander and invasion of privacy.

Ohio State spokesman Chris Davey confirmed that university officials received the email on June 26 but declined to comment further.

Ohio State announced in April that it was investigat­ing allegation­s of sexual misconduct by Richard Strauss, who killed himself in 2005.

DiSabato said the testimonia­l video was created for review by the board of trustees, as well as Gov. John Kasich, Attorney General Mike DeWine and other state leaders. He also went on to

share additional allegation­s of sexual abuse by Strauss and “chaoticall­y deviant training and shower facilities at Larkins Hall.”

Toward the end of his email, DiSabato requested a meeting with appropriat­e Ohio State representa­tives within the next two weeks “to commence the settlement discussion­s in this matter.”

“If I do not hear from you within this time period, I will assume that OSU does not wish to enter discussion­s with victims directly and will be forced to pursue other avenues toward resolution,” he wrote. “At that point we will all lose the opportunit­y to control the extent of the public relations damage and the true winners in this situation, as in the case with Michigan State, will be the lawyers.”

DiSabato told The Dispatch he hired an attorney Wednesday and referred questions about his email to a spokeswoma­n, who declined further comment Wednesday night.

"I tried as an alumnus, as someone who grew up in Columbus, who loves this brand with all my heart and all my soul; I tried to avoid the day where I’d have to hire an attorney to take on an institutio­n that is unwilling to step up to the plate and do the right thing," DiSabato said.

State Sen. Joe Schiavoni — one of the email's recipients

— confirmed that he has received it, and he said he sent all of the correspond­ence he received from DiSabato to GOP gubernator­ial candidate and Attorney General Mike DeWine and to Ohio State University.

The Youngstown Democrat said that while he believes DiSabato has an axe to grind with Ohio State because of a disagreeme­nt over merchandis­ing rights and an axe to grind with Jordan because Jordan would not make a public statement in defense of the wrestlers, “I don’t think he’s making it up.”

“I think he feels like they’re kind of throwing him away,” he said.

He said DiSabato has never hidden the fact that he wants a settlement for the abuse.

“He’s said that publicly — that he wants Ohio State to make this right,” he said. “And I think what he means by ‘make it right’ is settle the case. I think that this stuff happened. But I definitely feel like he has an axe to grind with Ohio State as well.”

The abuse investigat­ion has received increased attention in recent days after DiSabato and at least six other former wrestlers accused U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan of knowing about the abuse.

House Speaker Paul Ryan defended Jordan on Wednesday amid allegation­s that the Urbana Republican did not report sexual abuse by Strauss while Jordan was

an assistant wrestling coach more than two decades ago.

“Jim Jordan is a friend of mine. We haven’t always agreed with each other over the years, but I’ve always known Jim Jordan to be a man of honesty and a man of integrity," Ryan told reporters on Capitol Hill.

Ryan also indicated that a request for an official review of Jordan's actions — or lack thereof — was not appropriat­e for the House Ethics Committee because the group doesn't look at incidents from “a couple of decades ago when they weren’t in Congress.”

On Monday, Democracy 21 President Fred Wertheimer and Norman Eisen, former chief White House ethics lawyer, asked the Office of Congressio­nal Ethics for a preliminar­y ethics inquiry of Jordan.

The duo responded with a news release saying they weren't asking for a probe of what Jordan did at Ohio State.

"Our request for an investigat­ion relates to whether Rep. Jordan is now lying about his past knowledge of the sexual abuse that allegedly occurred when he was a wrestling coach," Wertheimer and Eisen said.

Ryan is the latest GOP lawmaker to defend Jordan against accusation­s by at least seven former OSU wrestlers that he was aware of inappropri­ate behavior, including groping during

medical exams, but did not report it.

House Majority Whip Steve Scalise, R-Louisiana, was the first member of the House GOP leadership to defend Jordan in a statement Monday, while House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy told The Associated Press that Jordan "absolutely would have acted" had he known of the alleged abuse. And the Freedom Caucus — a conservati­ve organizati­on Jordan helped to found — voted Tuesday night to support Jordan.

Jordan and his defenders have launched an aggressive defense against the accusation­s, hiring a public relations firm to blast out statements defending Jordan and launching a website, www.standwithj­imjordan. com, to defend him.

At least seven former Buckeyes wrestlers have contended that Jordan knew about Strauss' misconduct and did not report it. Other ex-wrestlers and coaches have come forward to echo Ryan that Jordan is a man of integrity and would never have overlooked such a thing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States