The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Review: Evidence about doctor’s abuse ignored

- By Kantele Franko

Ohio’s governor says the medical board ignored evidence in 1996 that an OSU doctor had abused male students.

The State Medical Board of Ohio ignored credible evidence in 1996 that an Ohio State University team doctor had been sexually abusing male students through genital exams for years and missed a chance to stop him, the governor and a review panel announced Friday.

A state working group that reviewed the old investigat­ion said it couldn’t determine why the medical board never took action against Richard Strauss or reported the now-deceased doctor to law enforcemen­t, but it found no evidence the case was intentiona­lly buried. One former employee said the investigat­ion fell into a “black hole,” according the group’s report.

Brian Garrett doesn’t buy that explanatio­n.

“That’s code for: Somebody didn’t want to do something,” said Garrett, a former nursing student who says he witnessed and experience­d sexual misconduct by Strauss while briefly working at the physician’s off-campus clinic in 1996, after the medical board investigat­ion.

Lawyers suing Ohio State over Strauss’ misconduct say they now represent over 300 accusers whose allegation­s span from 1979 to 1997 — nearly his entire career at the university. A law firm that separately investigat­ed allegation­s for the school concluded officials learned of concerns about Strauss as early as 1979 but did little to stop him .

“This whole story is disgusting,” Republican Gov. Mike DeWine said. “This whole story is a failure of people to do what’s right.”

Adele Kimmel, an attorney for some of the accusers, said the collective findings “show that every institutio­n and person with a duty to protect Ohio State students from sexual abuse by Dr. Strauss completely failed them.”

Attorney Richard Schulte, who represents a different group of about 125 survivors, said the available evidence still shows Ohio State was in the best position to stop Strauss but didn’t.

The university has publicly apologized and acknowledg­ed that failure.

Based on the state working group’s findings and recommenda­tions, DeWine is asking the medical board to identify whether there are any licensed Ohio doctors who knew or suspected Strauss’ misconduct and should have reported it but didn’t. He also wants the board to review about 1,500 closed cases from the past 25 years that involved sexual assault allegation­s against medical staff to see if any others involved evidence of criminal misconduct that was ignored.

“I shudder to think there could be other predator physicians still practicing in the state of Ohio or other places in our country,”

DeWine said. “I shudder to think that there could be other doctors out there who, because their case may have gone into a black hole, are still allowed to practice. We need to find that out.”

The medical board said it welcomed the working group’s recommenda­tions and is reviewing the findings but doesn’t know what went into the decision-making in 1996.

“Today we have a completely different medical board, a different investigat­ions and enforcemen­t team, with different processes in place to prevent

this from ever happening again,” board spokeswoma­n Tessie Pollock said. “We also have knowledge of predators and how they groom their victims. We’re looking at this retrospect­ively with 20/20 vision because we have learned so much from the survivor community.”

Ohio State officials never initiated an investigat­ion about Strauss by the medical board or law enforcemen­t, the working group said. Ironically, the board investigat­ion of Strauss began because of informatio­n learned about him in a separate

investigat­ion that he had initiated against another physician.

Charles Stienecker, who was board president in 1996, said he isn’t aware of the Strauss case or any other case of that nature being swept under the rug. He said only two board members would have known about the investigat­ion unless it advanced to a hearing, and those members are deceased.

Stienecker said he wasn’t aware of Strauss until he read allegation­s in the newspaper after the university announced an investigat­ion last year.

Messages seeking comment were left for the other surviving members of the 1996 board.

Details of the investigat­ion had remained confidenti­al by law until Friday, when the board released some documents about it.

Those records show Strauss denied inappropri­ately touching a student who complained about him, and he suggested the student invented the complaint to cover up an embarrassi­ng medical finding.

In a response to the complaint, Richard Strauss said he conducted a “very thorough examinatio­n” following high standards. He also said he had treated thousands of men for problems such as genital issues and sexually transmitte­d diseases, and none complained.

The medical board’s investigat­ion sat inactive while Strauss was able to retire from the university in 1998 with an honorary status, keep a medical license and move to California, which he filed documents to open a men’s clinic.

He killed himself in 2005. No one has publicly defended him.

Ohio State said it will review the findings about the medical board investigat­ion. The school had been forced to redact those references from the investigat­ion it released in May but has said its goal is to share an unredacted version of the report.

 ?? KANTELE FRANKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, right, and Public Safety Director Tom Stickrath announce that the State Medical Board ignored credible evidence in 1996 that an Ohio State University team doctor had been sexually abusing male students for years, during a news conference Friday in Columbus.
KANTELE FRANKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, right, and Public Safety Director Tom Stickrath announce that the State Medical Board ignored credible evidence in 1996 that an Ohio State University team doctor had been sexually abusing male students for years, during a news conference Friday in Columbus.

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