Los Angeles Times

Amid fallout, USC trustees pick Caruso to lead board

In first act as chair, he announces review of gynecologi­st scandal and pledges that it will finish by fall semester.

- By Matt Hamilton, Harriet Ryan and Thomas Curwen

The University of Southern California’s board of trustees has elected mall magnate Rick Caruso to be the new chair of the board, giving fresh leadership as the university navigates a widening scandal involving a longtime campus gynecologi­st.

The move marks the latest effort by USC to address the case, which has sparked a criminal investigat­ion by the Los Angeles Police Department and dozens of civil lawsuits. More than 400 people have contacted a hotline that the university establishe­d for patients to report their experience­s with Dr. George Tyndall.

In his first act as chairman, Caruso announced that the white-shoe L.A. law firm O’Melveny & Myers would conduct a “thorough and independen­t investigat­ion” into the gynecologi­st’s conduct and “reporting failures” at the clinic. He set an ambitious timeline for the review, pledging it would conclude before students return for the fall semester.

The attorney who will oversee the investigat­ion into the Tyndall case is Apalla Chopra, an O'Melveny partner who is considered an expert in labor, education and employment law.

The probe comes six days after USC President C.L. Max Nikias announced his resignatio­n. Nikias, who had been president since 2010, had faced withering criticism in the wake of a Times investigat­ion that found Tyndall had been the subject of numerous complaints of inappropri­ate comments and touching during his nearly three decades at USC. Tyndall has strongly denied ever mistreatin­g patients.

William Tierney, a professor in USC’s Rossier School of Education who had denounced the university’s response to the Tyndall accusation­s, called Caruso’s election a “positive step.”

“I think he recognizes, as I’m sure the board does, that we need to move aggressive­ly to not only solve the problems that hit us but to reaffirm the importance of USC moving forward rather than treading water,” Tier-

ney said.

Caruso replaces Colorado energy mogul John Mork as board chair. Mork, a close friend of the president, had expressed “full confidence in President Nikias’ leadership, ethics, and values” just days before Nikias stepped down.

It was Caruso, not Mork, who last week informed the university community of Nikias’ planned departure.

Caruso, a 1980 graduate whose private company owns the Grove and other iconic shopping complexes, has been the most visible of USC’s 59-member board of trustees since the scandal broke. Few other trustees have publicly spoken about the controvers­y.

In a letter to “members of the USC family” on Thursday, Caruso pledged to be transparen­t and vowed to institute more checks and balances in university affairs. He broadcast a special email address where alumni, staff and students could contact him, signaling trustees’ accessibil­ity. And he said trustees will begin selecting “a new world-class president for our university.

“This will be an orderly, seamless, painstakin­g and intelligen­t process,” he said.

A Times investigat­ion last month revealed that Tyndall had been the subject of repeated complaints during his time as the sole full-time gynecologi­st at the student health clinic. He continued to practice until 2016, when a clinic nurse reported him to the campus rape crisis center.

A university investigat­ion determined that Tyndall sexually harassed patients with inappropri­ate pelvic exams and sexually suggestive remarks. He was allowed to resign quietly with a payout. His patients, who number in the tens of thousands, were not informed of the findings.

A longtime trustee of USC, Caruso has been a prominent donor, and his family’s name graces the university’s center for Catholic students. He has also served on the board of commission­ers overseeing L.A.’s Department of Water and Power, and as president of the Los Angeles Police Commission.

Former LAPD Chief William Bratton was among those who offered plaudits to Caruso in a USC news release issued Thursday.

“I can think of no person better suited to transition the culture of an institutio­n in crisis, and lead its turnaround,” Bratton said.

Hours before Caruso’s announceme­nt, USC Provost Michael Quick addressed donors at the Trojan Legacy Circle luncheon at USC’s Town & Gown venue. Quick expressed hope that the university can fix problems and restore trust.

“This university has been through a lot of crises in the last 138 years,” he told the group. “We will weather this storm and emerge stronger, as we have with every crisis we have confronted.”

Quick acknowledg­ed the pain and anger that the campus community feels.

“I remember times when my parents were hurt, pained, sad, exasperate­d, frustrated, angry and disappoint­ed in me … because they knew that I failed to live up to, not their expectatio­ns, but my own expectatio­ns and my own potential,” he said. “I think a lot of us are going through that right now and rightly so. The great university of ours is better than what we have shown over the last year.”

 ?? Gary Friedman Los Angeles Times ?? USC TRUSTEES have elected mall magnate Rick Caruso, pictured at one of his shopping centers in 2013, to lead the board as the university weathers a scandal over longtime campus gynecologi­st Dr. George Tyndall.
Gary Friedman Los Angeles Times USC TRUSTEES have elected mall magnate Rick Caruso, pictured at one of his shopping centers in 2013, to lead the board as the university weathers a scandal over longtime campus gynecologi­st Dr. George Tyndall.

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