Los Angeles Times

USC official leaves amid investigat­ion

David Carrera, a head of fundraisin­g for the university, is accused of misconduct toward female colleagues.

- By Harriet Ryan

David Carrera, a university vice president responsibl­e for fundraisin­g, is the subject of an internal investigat­ion about his treatment of women.

A USC administra­tor responsibl­e for raising hundreds of millions of dollars for the university has left his post in the wake of allegation­s that he sexually harassed female colleagues, the latest blow to a campus already dealing with the arrest of an assistant basketball coach and the departures of two medical school deans accused of misconduct.

David Carrera, a university vice president who helped lead USC’s historic $6-billion fundraisin­g campaign, is the subject of an internal university investigat­ion in which dozens of employees have been interviewe­d about his treatment of women, university officials confirmed Tuesday in response to inquiries from The Times.

The head of USC’s Office of Equity and Diversity, which is conducting the investigat­ion, said in a statement that Carrera left his job last week.

“Discrimina­tion and harassment have no place at USC. The university does not tolerate behavior that violates its strict policy and takes appropriat­e disciplina­ry action when it does,” said Gretchen Dahlinger Means, the office’s executive director.

At USC, complaints by faculty, staff and students about harassment or discrimina­tion are investigat­ed by the Office of Equity and Diversity.

Despite Carrera’s departure, “the investigat­ion is still ongoing and will continue until we fully complete our findings,” Means added.

University officials declined to say whether Carrera was fired or had resigned. Carrera did not respond to messages seeking comment.

Carrera, 50, who held the title of vice president of advancemen­t and health sciences developmen­t, joined USC from Johns Hopkins University in 2014. In addition to helping lead the endowment campaign, Carrera presided over the fundraisin­g activities for nine profession­al schools, including the Keck School of Medicine, Annenberg School for Communicat­ion and Journalism and Gould School of Law, as well as USC’s hospitals, his USC biography said.

Sources familiar with the investigat­ion said USC received at least five complaints about Carrera this year alone. But they said the university did not open an investigat­ion into Carrera until after The Times published a July story revealing drug use by former Keck Dean Carmen Puliafito. After that story ran, the sources said, some employees lodged another complaint against Carrera, and

the university launched an investigat­ion in August.

In interviews with investigat­ors, some employees alleged that Carrera questioned women who worked under him in USC’s fundraisin­g operation about their dating habits and volunteere­d informatio­n about his sex life, the sources said. Those employees also said that Carrera made comments about the desirabili­ty of female co-workers and women he encountere­d at fundraisin­g events, the sources said.

A university spokesman said Carrera’s boss, university Senior Vice President Albert Checchio, learned of complaints about Carrera in March. Checchio “rebuked” Carrera, but “at the time, he did not think it merited a referral to OED,” USC spokesman Charles Sipkins said. He declined to describe the complaints or explain what led Checchio to conclude he did not need to alert the equity office.

Checchio did not return messages seeking comment.

The website for the Office of Equity and Diversity instructs employees to refer complaints to investigat­ors immediatel­y.

“Should a complaint of harassment or discrimina­tion be brought to your attention, contact our office immediatel­y. In order to assure that all complaints are addressed quickly and appropriat­ely, department­s may not proceed in any way to investigat­e allegation­s of this sort on their own,” the site states.

Carrera continued working on campus until Sept. 9, when USC placed him on administra­tive leave. The move came a day after Times reporters started approachin­g current and former employees with questions about Carrera’s behavior toward women. Sipkins, the university spokesman, said, “As the investigat­ion proceeded, it was clear that it was better that Carrera be placed on leave due to the nature of the investigat­ion.”

His departure occurred the same week as the abrupt resignatio­n of medical school Dean Rohit Varma. University leaders forced Varma from his post Thursday after learning that The Times was preparing to publish a story about a 2002 sexual harassment allegation against him that resulted in a $135,000 settlement with a female researcher.

Varma’s predecesso­r, Puliafito, stepped down in March 2016 following years of complaints about his drinking and abusive treatment of colleagues.

Last month, federal prosecutor­s in New York charged assistant basketball coach Tony Bland with crimes including conspiracy to commit bribery and wire fraud as part of a wide-ranging investigat­ion into corruption in college sports recruiting.

In a letter to the medical school community Tuesday night, Provost Michael Quick acknowledg­ed concerns and disappoint­ment among faculty, students and staff and announced several new measures “to strengthen and improve our culture.”

USC plans to create a new vice provost position specifical­ly to “provide leadership training to address our expectatio­ns of deans and senior leaders, and to evaluate their performanc­e,” Quick wrote. The university also will establish an ombuds office to field complaints and help manage “difficult situations that arise in the workplace.”

“We recognize that the values and conduct of our leaders should be beyond reproach, and we are committed to living out these values,” Quick wrote.

‘The values and conduct of our leaders should be beyond reproach, and we are committed to living out these values.’ — Michael Quick, USC provost

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? A UNIVERSITY spokesman said David Carrera’s boss learned of complaints about Carrera in March but didn’t think they merited a referral for investigat­ion.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times A UNIVERSITY spokesman said David Carrera’s boss learned of complaints about Carrera in March but didn’t think they merited a referral for investigat­ion.

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