Antelope Valley Press

Admin who didn’t report OSU doc’s misconduct cedes license

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A former Ohio State University student health director has surrendere­d his medical license after being accused of failing to report several complaints in the mid1990s about sexual misconduct by Richard Strauss, the university doctor now accused of abusing young men for two decades.

The state medical board citation against former director Ted Grace made him the first person to face potential discipline in relation to Ohio State’s failure to stop misconduct by Strauss, who died in 2005. A hearing was scheduled for next week, but Grace permanentl­y surrendere­d his Ohio license under an agreement that was approved and confirmed but not released Wednesday by the medical board.

Grace had most recently led student health services at Southern Illinois University. He notified officials there last month that he was retiring, university spokespers­on Kim Rendfeld said in an email. SIU officials have no concerns about Grace’s performanc­e there, Rendfeld said.

A message seeking comment from Grace was left Wednesday at an phone number listed under his name.

Grace was cited for not reporting complaints and for falsely telling an Ohio State student that there hadn’t been previous complaints about Strauss when that student reported being mistreated by the physician at the student health center in 1995.

The former student, Steve Snyder-Hill, filed a complaint about that with the state board last year, alleging Grace had lied to him and mishandled the situation.

Snyder-Hill said in an email that he appreciate­s the medical board pushing for accountabi­lity.

“Finally, a day of vindicatio­n!” he wrote.

Grace has previously said that he gave Strauss a verbal warning back then and that the health center started using a consent form with the option of a chaperone specifical­ly for men being treated by Strauss. After a third complaint, Grace stopped Strauss from seeing patients there.

Strauss retired in 1998, and allegation­s about his misconduct didn’t become public until an ex-wrestler spoke out in 2018, years after Strauss’ death. Ohio State apologized publicly after an investigat­ion conducted for the school concluded Strauss’ misconduct occurred in his work with various athletic teams, the health center and an off-campus clinic.

No one has since defended Strauss publicly.

Roughly 400 men have sued the university over its failure to stop him despite students raising concerns with school employees as early as 1979. Many of the men say they were groped during exams.

The university has pledged a “monetary resolution” for those Strauss harmed. It has reached nearly $47 million in settlement­s for 185 of the plaintiffs.

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