Los Angeles Times

USC doctor’s license is at risk

Medical board brings formal charges against gynecologi­st accused of sexual abuse at student clinic.

- By Matt Hamilton

Dr. George Tyndall, the longtime campus gynecologi­st at USC, faces the loss of his medical license after state regulators formally accused him of negligence and sexual misconduct with several patients.

The charges brought by the Medical Board of California come as Tyndall and USC face hundreds of civil claims from women who allege sexual abuse and harassment. On Friday, USC announced that it had agreed to pay $215 million to settle a federal class-action lawsuit brought by several former patients. The university’s total legal costs for the scandal are expected to be significan­tly higher.

The medical board’s accusation outlines a series of appointmen­ts with five patients in which Tyndall allegedly made lewd remarks, performed “non-clinical” breast and pelvic exams, and, in one case, mocked the injuries of a patient after she told him she had recently been sexually assaulted.

According to the 13-page accusation, Tyndall locked the door when meeting with a graduate medical student in 2012, watched her disrobe and repeatedly inserted his fingers in her while compli-

menting her body, asking whether she worked as a model and wondering about her mother’s beauty.

While performing a vaginal exam on an undergradu­ate student in 2016, Tyndall allegedly said her boyfriend was a “lucky guy.” Another patient said he used both hands to grope her breasts, a departure from standard exams, according to the Sept. 26 filing, which has not been previously reported.

Tyndall, 71, has repeatedly insisted that his care aligned with medical norms, and in interviews with The Times this year, he defended his frank discussion­s about sex as a way to counsel his mostly younger patients. In August, he voluntaril­y agreed to surrender his license to focus on his defense, and he now has a team of lawyers to handle criminal, civil and regulatory matters. He has denied any wrongdoing while working at USC.

The attorney representi­ng him before the medical board, Peter Osinoff, declined to comment.

An investigat­ion by the Los Angeles Times first revealed that Tyndall was accused repeatedly of misconduct by patients and staff but was allowed to continue treating students until 2016.

The Times reported that an internal investigat­ion concluded Tyndall’s behavior during pelvic exams was outside the scope of current medical practice and amounted to sexual harassment of patients. Tyndall was allowed to resign quietly with an undisclose­d financial settlement, and USC did not notify the medical board until March — months after his departure.

Tyndall began working at USC in 1989, but the board’s accusation contains the accounts of patients who saw him during his final decade at the university.

In 2009, he allegedly showed a graduate student a “provocativ­e photograph” of his wife, inquired about her sex life and later gave her prescripti­ons for the morning-after pill, even though she did not seek the medication, according to the filing.

In the 2012 appointmen­t with the graduate medical student, Tyndall asked where she was from in China and then proceeded with the pelvic exam. He inserted his fingers into her and “moved his fingers in and out, back and forth, repeatedly, for several minutes.” After she asked him to stop, Tyndall said that it would conclude in a few minutes “and that she should just relax,” according to the filing.

At one point, Tyndall put his face “within a couple of inches of her vagina” and she heard him “breathing heavily,” according to the filing.

Tyndall also allegedly encouraged her to take birth control so that her boyfriend could enjoy unprotecte­d sex, the filing states. The board alleged the exam was unprofessi­onal and amounted to sexual misconduct.

The accounts detailed in the medical board’s filing dovetail with the allegation­s of more than 460 former patients who have filed lawsuits against USC, alleging sexual abuse and harassment at the student health center.

A criminal investigat­ion by the L.A. Police Department is continuing. Detectives so far have presented 64 cases to the Los Angeles County district attorney’s sex crimes unit. Prosecutor­s are evaluating the cases, and no charges have been filed against the physician.

 ?? USC ?? THE BOARD’S accusation has patient accounts from George Tyndall’s final decade at USC.
USC THE BOARD’S accusation has patient accounts from George Tyndall’s final decade at USC.

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