The Columbus Dispatch

Attorneys want Strauss case judge recused, case sent to Cincinatti

- Sheridan Hendrix

Attorneys representi­ng plaintiffs in a civil lawsuit who have accused the late Ohio State University physician Richard Strauss of abusing them have filed motions in a Columbus federal court to recuse a judge based on a conflict of interest and to move the case to Cincinnati.

The motions, filed late Wednesday evening, are in response to a disclosure made by U.S. District Judge Michael H. Watson, who has been overseeing the case since 2019. Watson gave plaintiffs in the civil suits until Sunday to request his recusal from their cases, following his disclosure last Friday that his wife’s business was licensed to sell OSU merchandis­e.

Watson disclosed the licensing agreement to plaintiffs after he was contacted by NBC News with questions about his impartiali­ty, according to a transcript of the session obtained by The Dispatch.

Plaintiffs’ attorneys said in the motions that “judicial impartiali­ty is one of the most fundamenta­l elements of the judicial system,” but that has been hard to come by in Columbus, home of Ohio State.

Attorneys said based on Watson’s wife having a license to sell Ohio State merchandis­e, the university being a customer of her business, and Watson being employed as an adjunct professor at Ohio State’ Moritz College of Law, recusal and a change in venue are necessary.

“But whether the conflict is real or apparent, the fact is that these plaintiffs, who were abused as teenage boys by the combined power of OSU and its team doctor, will never get justice in Columbus ... The victims deserve a level playing field for the first time in their lives,” according to the motion.

Watson had previously disclosed in January 2019 that he served as an adjunct professor at Ohio State, and “no party requested my recusal from the case based on that relationsh­ip,” he said to plaintiffs last week.

Watson said in 2019 that “every member of this bench probably, ha[s] at one time or another served as an adjunct professor of Ohio State,” according to court records.

Attorneys said in Wednesday’s motion that other federal judges in Columbus have recused themselves when cases involving the university have come to their bench.

In 2019, investigat­ors hired by Ohio State concluded that Strauss sexually abused at least 177 students between 1979 and his retirement in 1998, and that university personnel repeatedly failed to act. Lawsuits filed since then against the university indicate that the number of victims was much higher. At last count in the university’s 2019 crime report, Ohio State reported 1,429 instances of fondling and 47 instances of rape by Strauss.

Ed Vasquez, a spokesman for the law offices representi­ng the plaintiffs, said attorneys for the alleged victims would not be issuing a statement or be available for comment.

“The attached motion speaks for itself,” Vasquez said in an email. shendrix@dispatch.com @sheridan12­0

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