Los Angeles Times

Report on alleged sexual abuse rocks boarding school

Ojai’s elite Thacher discloses accusation­s of faculty misconduct dating to the 1980s.

- By Brittny Mejia, Matt Hamilton, Melissa Gomez and Harriet Ryan

The Thacher School, among California’s most elite private schools, acknowledg­ed Wednesday decades of allegation­s of student sexual misconduct, harassment and “boundary crossing” by faculty members at the $64,700-a-year Ojai boarding academy.

In an extraordin­ary public disclosure, the allegation­s at the exclusive high school were compiled in a report posted on its website. In it, attorneys hired by Thacher laid out allegation­s of rape, groping, unwanted touching and inappropri­ate comments dating back 40 years in a level of detail surprising for a private institutio­n.

The 90-page document identified six alleged perpetrato­rs by name and recounted in lengthy passages the accusation­s of misconduct — and alleged efforts by former school administra­tors to cover up complaints and blame teenage victims.

In the most serious episode described, an alumna from the 1980s accused her English teacher of repeatedly raping her, starting when she was 16. The school did not call police but dispatched a male assistant headmaster who reportedly asked the girl if she “enjoyed” the sex, the report said. The counselor later included her “unfortunat­e involvemen­t with a faculty member” in a letter of recommenda­tion for college.

The report was completed by the Los Angeles law firm Munger, Tolles & Olson, which the school’s trustees hired in August to conduct an investigat­ion spurred by an alumni social media campaign, including an Instagram account, @rpeculture­atthacher.

The account described itself as “a safe space” for those victimized at the school and led to the law firm’s inquiry, which included interviews with more

than 120 former students, parents, and current and former faculty and staff.

No one accused in the report has been charged, though authoritie­s in Ventura County told The Times they were in the process of reviewing the incidents.

Last week, Thacher officials shared with the Ventura County Sheriff ’s Office a synopsis of approximat­ely 20 incidents outlining myriad alleged misconduct, according to Sgt. Hector Macias, who leads the department’s sexual assault unit. The school did not provide detectives with the 90page report until Wednesday, the same day as its public release.

“We are going to look into them on a case-by-case basis,” Macias said of the allegation­s. “We are going to continue to work with the school and their law office in order to vet some of this out and see if the victims are willing to cooperate.”

Investigat­ors were examining whether the incidents constitute­d crimes and whether teachers and school officials abided by their duty to notify law enforcemen­t about suspected abuse of minors, according to Capt. Eric Buschow.

Despite the 40-year time span, the Thacher School, whose $176-million endowment places it among the wealthiest boarding schools in the nation, could still face lawsuits from former students. A California law that took effect in 2020 opened a three-year window for victims to file civil claims that might have expired due to the statute of limitation­s. The law also extended the statute of limitation­s for reporting childhood sexual assault from the time a victim is age 26 to age 40.

Allegation­s in the report dated to the 1980s at the bucolic, 427-acre boarding school, where academic rigor is pursued along with an outdoor ethos. With an enrollment of 259 students, the college prep program includes riding and tending to horses, camping and sports. Many faculty live on campus and are encouraged to become involved in the lives of students.

The most serious of the allegation­s detailed in the report involved an English teacher at the boarding school. A student alleged that while she was feeling “lost” and homesick during her freshman year, the teacher befriended her and later kissed and touched her body without her consent. She alleged numerous instances of rape that began her sophomore year and lasted into her junior year.

Students and faculty members seemed aware and even concerned about the English teacher’s associatio­n with the girl, according to the report. Administra­tors likewise appeared aware: Between the girl’s freshman and sophomore years, the teacher received a performanc­e review from the then-dean of faculty, who urged, “You need to put some distance between her and you next year.”

In the student’s junior year, she shared informatio­n with her mother, who contacted the school. In the report, the student recounted being interviewe­d by the dean and said he pressed for details about the teacher’s sexual conduct and asked about specific sex acts and if she enjoyed it. The dean denied asking if she enjoyed it, according to the report. He could not be reached for comment by The Times.

After being confronted by administra­tors, the teacher resigned and left campus. The report’s authors found no written evidence that anyone at Thacher ever reported the teacher to police, although the school’s college recommenda­tion letter for the student made mention of her “unfortunat­e involvemen­t with a faculty member.”

A psychologi­st who spoke with the student — and who was not affiliated with Thacher — reported possible child abuse to the Ventura County Sheriff’s Office three weeks after the teacher resigned.

The Sheriff’s Office cleared the case, at the time noting that the “complainan­t refuses to participat­e.” The psychologi­st later wrote to Willard “Bill” Wyman, who was then head of school, stating that he and the school administra­tion had convinced the student’s mother that it would be in her daughter’s “best interest not to press charges, as it would further isolate her from her peers.”

Wyman, who led the school from 1975 to 1992, was also accused of inappropri­ate conduct. The school hired outside lawyers in 1992 after a group of faculty and students approached a trustee with complaints.

Those lawyers found the former head of school had committed “a pattern of offensive verbal conduct and improper touching” toward female students and staff, and uncovered 17 incidents, including one in which Wyman asked two girls to wear “slinky” and “sexy” clothes at a dinner party at his house and placed his hand on a student’s buttocks.

Wyman, who has since died, stepped down in 1992, although his resignatio­n letter did not detail the allegation­s against him.

The chair of Thacher’s governing board, Daniel W. Yih, wrote in a letter accompanyi­ng the report that none of the accused are still employed by the school.

“To survivors of sexual misconduct and their families in our community, we are deeply sorry,” Yih wrote, adding, “We have learned a great deal about our history over the past several months — much of which has been difficult to confront.”

In a statement, Thacher’s board of trustees acknowledg­ed the consequenc­es of its failure to exert proper oversight and enforce the requiremen­ts of mandatory reporting of alleged sexual abuse to law enforcemen­t.

“The impact on students was profound. Many suffered lasting harm not just from the sexual misconduct itself but also from the school’s handling of the misconduct,” the trustees said in a statement.

The report detailed numerous instances of failings by faculty members and administra­tors. One faculty member, Michael Mulligan, the dean of students in the 1980s who later succeeded Wyman as head of school, had previously worked with a teacher at a New England boarding school who had an inappropri­ate relationsh­ip with a female soccer player, the report said. Mulligan reported the teacher’s misconduct, and the teacher was asked to leave at the end of the school year.

But a few years later, in 1987, that same teacher was hired at Thacher as the girls’ varsity soccer coach, according to the report. Mulligan supported the hiring because he knew the man was a great coach and didn’t think he would make the same mistake at Thacher, the report said.

When a teacher later reported to Mulligan that the soccer coach was spending a lot of time alone with a student, including in the coach’s house and car, Mulligan directed that teacher to counsel the coach about it.

According to the report, Mulligan said he regretted not confrontin­g the coach himself when the concern was raised. That same student later met with Mulligan, according to the report, and detailed an evening when the coach had invited her into his house and massaged her back and shoulders. The student’s parents said they also reached out to Mulligan, but that the coach kept his job.

Mulligan told the school’s lawyers that he didn’t remember being notified about the unwanted back massage and added that if he’d heard of any inappropri­ate or unwanted physical contact with a student, he would have confronted the coach and removed him from campus.

Once in college, that same student crossed paths with two others who shared their experience­s with the coach, which happened after hers. The three decided to speak to Mulligan together in mid-June 1997. In that meeting, the report states, one of the students said Mulligan explained that the coach was “lonely and confused.”

According to the report, Mulligan confirmed the meeting but said his memory of the details differed. After hearing the allegation­s of one of the students who said she was groped by the coach, Mulligan said, he told the coach to resign and leave campus. Mulligan said the coach’s conduct was reported to law enforcemen­t, although he didn’t recall making the report himself. The law firm noted that it was unable to find any record of when a report was made or to what agency, and the coach went on to work at other schools.

In a June 12 letter to alumni, faculty, staff and parents, Mulligan said that during the course of the investigat­ion, several victims of alleged sexual assault came forward to share their experience­s, prompting him to apologize for his conduct.

“I particular­ly regret situations where certain decisions I made contribute­d to this suffering, and I fully accept that criticism,” he wrote. “My fervent hope is that the conclusion­s that the Board has reached and the corrective actions they and the current administra­tion undertake as a result will contribute in important ways to doing ‘the best work ... that we can,’ with and for their students.”

In a statement Thursday through his attorney, Mulligan expressed “deep empathy for the victims” and hopes that the past and present school community “will learn from this report and that its lessons will inform how the school operates going forward.”

In releasing the findings, Thacher officials announced the school would take “corrective actions” to address and prevent sexual misconduct. Future recommenda­tions on decisions and policies would include input from a task force created by the head of school.

The school said it would establish a “comprehens­ive protocol” for adult-on-student sexual misconduct reports that would include bringing in a third-party investigat­or and a response team trained in addressing such allegation­s; it will adopt policies to inform the school community and other institutio­ns regarding outgoing employees; and it will “strengthen” restrictio­ns on hiring individual­s with a reported history of sexual misconduct.

It also said it would increase resources for students to report sexual misconduct, and improve counseling services.

Paul Mones, a sexual abuse attorney who is representi­ng a victim who was interviewe­d for the report, described the report’s findings as “unfortunat­ely typical” of private boarding academies.

“Because these are closed environmen­ts, where the teachers live on campus by and large, and the students live there, the lines of appropriat­e behavior, even the grooming behaviors, are blurred,” said Mones, adding, “It seems here that the teachers there really were able to operate or run their lives with these students with complete impunity.”

 ?? Google Earth ?? THE THACHER School, a $64,700-a-year boarding academy, sits on 427 acres in Ojai. Thacher released a report Wednesday acknowledg­ing years of alleged abuse.
Google Earth THE THACHER School, a $64,700-a-year boarding academy, sits on 427 acres in Ojai. Thacher released a report Wednesday acknowledg­ing years of alleged abuse.

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