Lodi News-Sentinel

USC reaches secret settlement with 80 men who accused campus doctor of misconduct

- Matt Hamilton

LOS ANGELES — The University of Southern California has agreed to settle claims from 80 former patients, most identifyin­g as LGBTQ, who accused a men’s health physician of misconduct — although the terms of the settlement remain shrouded in secrecy.

In a joint statement released Thursday, USC and lawyers for the alleged victims of Dr. Dennis Kelly said that “all parties have mutually agreed that the details of the settlement will remain confidenti­al.” The statement continued: “The parties hope that this amicable resolution will bring closure to the plaintiffs.”

The settlement brings to a close a series of lawsuits that were first filed in 2019 and grew to 80 former patients accusing Kelly of sexual battery, harassment and inappropri­ate remarks during appointmen­ts. Four of the plaintiffs identified as heterosexu­al, and 76 as LGBTQ; one plaintiff identified as male at the time of the appointmen­t with Kelly but now identifies as a woman, said Mikayla Kellogg, one of the lead attorneys in the case.

Some former patients alleged that after learning they had sex with other men, Kelly asked a series of intrusive, prurient questions, such as how much pornograph­y they consumed and whether they “hooked up” with sexual partners online. One former patient told The Times in 2019 that he felt unnerved when Kelly “just sat there staring” at him while he undressed and accused the doctor of graphic, “judgmental” lines of questionin­g during his appointmen­ts.

From deposition­s, interviews with witnesses, and a review of scores of documents, Kellogg said, USC had received complaints about Kelly “throughout the course of employment.” The most serious complaint was relayed to the university’s chief health officer in “a face-to-face meeting” by a senior USC administra­tor.

“Despite this complaint, USC continued to allow Dr. Kelly to see students for sensitive medical exams,” Kellogg said.

Kelly, who retired from USC in 2018 and surrendere­d his medical license two years later, has denied allegation­s of inappropri­ate behavior and neither USC nor the physician admitted wrongdoing as part of the settlement announced Thursday. In a 2019 interview, Kelly said that as an openly gay physician who dedicated his career to giving counsel to LGBTQ students, the lawsuits’ claims were “terribly hurtful.”

“I know I did it all profession­ally and without any other motive,” Kelly said at the time.

The quiet resolution of claims against Kelly contrasts with widely publicized settlement­s with thousands of former patients of Dr. George Tyndall, which exceeded $1.1 billion. In the Tyndall cases, USC did not impose confidenti­ality provisions except on a small group of former patients. When the final Tyndall settlement was announced last year for $852 million, both President Carol Folt and the chairman of USC’s trustees, Rick Caruso, issued public statements of apology. “The amount is significan­t, and we will face some difficult financial choices in the near term,” Folt said at the time.

Asked Thursday how a confidenti­al settlement served USC’s commitment to transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, a university spokespers­on declined further comment.

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