The Sunnyvale Sun

SJSU officials accused of cover-ups, retaliatio­n

Fired athletic official says president, AD hid sexual misconduct

- By Jon Becker jbecker@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

The former deputy athletic director at San Jose State University is accusing the school’s athletic director and president, as well as other school officials, of covering up wrongdoing and retaliatin­g against those who’ve reported it, according to a bombshell report published Sept. 17.

Steve O’Brien, the No. 2 person in the SJSU athletic department when he was fired in March, filed a tort claim notice with the California State University System. O’Brien said he was a victim of retaliatio­n and lost his job because he wouldn’t discipline two employees, including the whistleblo­wer in a sexual assault investigat­ion against an exsports medicine director, USA Today reported.

A tort claim notice is a prerequisi­te to filing a lawsuit against a public agency. The claim notice is typically used for those seeking monetary damages. USA Today said O’Brien filed his claim on Aug. 26 and is seeking damages of more than $25,000.

Among O’Brien’s claims are that San Jose State’s athletic director Marie Tuite often threatened her department’s employees, telling them, “Those who make attempts on the life of the king aren’t kept in the kingdom very long.”

O’Brien, who was hired in 2017, was fired by Tuite on March 2.

Christophe­r Boscia, O’Brien’s lawyer, told USA

Today his client was terminated for exposing the school’s attempt to cover up sexual assault claims against one of its athletic trainers, Scott Shaw. At least 17 female swimmers had come forward with complaints about Shaw, starting in 2009.

Shaw turned in his resignatio­n at SJSU last month, but the investigat­ion continues into reports that he touched athletes “beneath their undergarme­nts, massaging their breasts and pelvic areas when they sought treatment for other parts of their bodies.”

Although SJSU cleared Shaw of wrongdoing in 2010 after its initial investigat­ion, the school launched another investigat­ion last December after women’s swimming coach Sage Hopkins filed a complaint with the NCAA, as well as other state and federal agencies.

Hopkins shared a nearly 300-page file, filled with accounts from swimmers and allegation­s that Tuite and other school officials retaliated against him and his team for complainin­g about Shaw.

O’Brien said he was told by Tuite “for dubious reasons” to reprimand Hopkins. The Spartans’ athletic director accused Hopkins of sending “hostile” emails to senior associate athletic director Eileen Daley.

O’Brien’s lawyer said another contributi­ng factor to his client’s terminatio­n was his reluctance to discipline David Rasmussen, San Jose

State’s compliance director, who had investigat­ed a football player accused of using marijuana, and a baseball player for gambling. Both are NCAA violations.

While Tuite didn’t dispute Rasmussen’s report to the NCAA regarding the baseball player’s violations, she questioned the process of Rasmussen’s investigat­ion. She reportedly accused Rasmussen of not being “supportive enough” of the player, and instructed O’Brien to investigat­e the matter.

The tort claim notice also accuses school president Mary Papazian of being among those complicit in what Boscia says was wrongful terminatio­n, as well as covering up allegation­s.

In response to a request by this news organizati­on for comment, San Jose State released the following statement: “Although we disagree with many of Mr. O’Brien’s assertions, it is our practice not to comment on personnel matters.”

 ?? JIM GENSHEIMER — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? San Jose State University President Mary Papazian, left, and Marie Tuite, shown in 2017, are facing a lawsuit from a former deputy athletic director.
JIM GENSHEIMER — STAFF ARCHIVES San Jose State University President Mary Papazian, left, and Marie Tuite, shown in 2017, are facing a lawsuit from a former deputy athletic director.

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