Houston Chronicle Sunday

University of Michigan officials told of abuse decades ago

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ANN ARBOR, Michigan — University of Michigan officials were warned more than four decades ago that one of its doctors was fondling patients during medical exams, but he continued working there despite a demotion and went on to allegedly abuse again as a physician with the school’s athletic department, records obtained Friday by the Associated Press show.

In 1980, the late Dr. Robert E. Anderson was pressed to step down as head of the University Health Service amid such concerns, according to a statement that his former supervisor gave to a campus detective who had started investigat­ing the physician more than a year ago following a complaint from a former university wrestler.

When the detective told Tom Easthope, a former university administra­tor who oversaw Anderson’s department, that he was investigat­ing “inappropri­ate behavior” by Anderson, Easthope replied, “I bet there are over 100 people that could be on that list,” according to the records.

Easthope told the detective that he had confronted Anderson about “fooling around in the exam rooms with the boy patients” and told the doctor, “You gotta go.” He said the doctor didn’t deny the allegation­s against him. By 1980, at least two students had made complaints to Michigan officials about Anderson inappropri­ately touching them, according to interviews and records.

When the detective informed Easthope that Anderson had continued working on campus, including with Michigan’s football program, up until 2003, Easthope became “visibly shaken” and added that “he was sure that he had left the university.”

On Thursday, university President Mark Schlissel said in prepared remarks at the open of the school’s board of regents meeting that its police investigat­ion, launched in 2018, had found “indication­s” that staff were “aware of rumors and allegation­s of misconduct.”

Washtenaw County prosecutor­s first received the police department’s report in late April or early May 2019, said Steven Hiller, assistant chief prosecutin­g attorney.

A prosecutor concluded that summer that no criminal charges could be authorized because the primary suspect had died and none of the offenses was within Michigan’s six-year statute of limitation­s, Hiller said Thursday.

But the records obtained Friday add much more detail to what those indication­s were and show that complaints about Anderson, who died in 2008, spanned much of his tenure at Michigan, up to 2002. More men came forward this week after the investigat­ion became public, including Olympic wrestler Andy Hrovat, who said that Anderson touched him inappropri­ately during medical exams during his freshman year in 1998.

The records were released by the Washtenaw County Prosecutin­g Attorney’s Office in response to a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request. The prosecutor’s office had reviewed complaints following the university police investigat­ion, which was triggered after a former wrestler in July 2018 sent a four-page letter to current Athletic Director Warde Manuel detailing decades-old abuse.

That wrestler wrote that in 1975, five years before Anderson’s demotion, he had informed his coach, Bill Johannesen, and the then-Athletic Director Don Canham that he had been fondled and given unnecessar­y rectal exams. Athletes on other sports teams had similar experience­s with Anderson, the wrestler wrote.

“I am fully aware that it was the 1970s and it was an entirely different world then,” the wrestler wrote in his letter. “I am also aware that 40-plus years is an extremely long time ago. I expect nothing. I want nothing. I just feel the need to report this.”

The student, whose name was redacted in the records, also recalled Anderson being known as “Dr. ‘Drop Your Drawers’ Anderson” by athletes in the 1970s. He accused the doctor of touching his penis and testicles and inserting his finger into his rectum “too many times for it to have been considered diagnostic or therapeuti­c for the conditions and injuries that I had.”

The first time this happened was during his freshman year in 1972, when he went to the doctor for treatment for facial cold sores, according to the letter. The wrestler saw the doctor several more times for that condition and was inappropri­ately touched each time, he wrote.

“I didn’t like it, but I didn’t really pay much attention to it,” the letter said. “He was the doctor and it never occurred to me that he was enjoying what I was not.”

The wrestler said the doctor touched him again during his junior season after he dislocated an elbow.

“I found it strange that I needed a penis and hernia check,” he wrote.

The wrestler told Manuel that athletes on at least two other sports teams knew about Anderson’s conduct while he was at the school.

Johannesen, who coached the Michigan wrestling team in the 1970s, told police that, while none of his athletes told him they were violated by a doctor, he did remember them “laughing” and “joking” about one particular doctor who told them to “take your pants down” for a “hurt elbow.” Asked by police to recall the doctor’s name, Johannesen said: “Dr. Anderson.”

A physician’s assistant who worked at the school in the 1970s, Deborah Kowal, told police that Anderson conducted annual physicals of the athletes, including rectal exams. She said she did a couple of rectal exams until then-football coach Bo Schembechl­er found out. “She said that coach Schembechl­er did not want a woman performing rectal exams on his male players, so Dr. Anderson did the physicals after this,” according to the report.

The nearly 100 pages detailing the police investigat­ion also include interviews with people who said they had not heard any complaints about Anderson. Among them was Russell Miller, who was an athletic trainer when Anderson worked with the Michigan football team. He told police that Anderson was an “unbelievab­le team doctor.”

Miller said the thought of Anderson being investigat­ed “shatters him,” according to the police report. Jack Harbaugh, who was an assistant football coach at Michigan in the 1970s and is the father of current head coach Jim Harbaugh and Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh, told police he did not know of anything negative about Anderson. He said he had “great admiration” for him.

Authoritie­s also contacted the state’s licensing and regulatory affairs agency and found that it had received a complaint of sexual misconduct against Anderson filed in May 1994. The records don’t describe the outcome of the complaint, which was closed within 10 months, and the agency’s records on the case were purged seven years later. But an agency official managed to find the name of a man who filed the complaint and provided that to the detective.

When the detective reached out, the complainan­t said: “I am glad someone finally called to look into this.”

The man, whose name is redacted in the records, told the detective that he was a student at the University of Michigan starting in 1973. Once he went for a routine physical at a campus health center, and during that Anderson fondled him to the point of ejaculatio­n. He said Anderson “did not appear to react to this, nor did he say anything,” according to the detective’s summary of the interview.

The man finally filed the complaint decades later because “I couldn’t live with myself,” the detective wrote.

The police report also describes an alleged sexual assault from 2002. A man affiliated with the university said in 2018 that he was sexually assaulted by Anderson while being examined for a brain tumor.

The man said he was told to take off all his clothes and lie down on the exam table. Anderson allegedly started to feel his feet and legs with both hands — in a rubbing, prodding fashion — before moving to his genitals.

“He said that he thought it was totally inappropri­ate and remembered the way that Dr. Anderson’s breathing patterns changed while he was massaging” his genitals, the officer wrote.

 ?? Robert Kalmbach / Associated Press ?? The University of Michigan’s president apologized to “anyone who was harmed” by Dr. Robert E. Anderson.
Robert Kalmbach / Associated Press The University of Michigan’s president apologized to “anyone who was harmed” by Dr. Robert E. Anderson.

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