San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

No charges over reported sex abuse at California school

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OJAI, Ventura County — No criminal charges will be filed over decades of alleged sexual misconduct at an elite private high school in Southern California even though “numerous” children were victimized, authoritie­s said.

The Ventura County Sheriff ’s Office and the county district attorney’s office announced last week that they completed an 18month investigat­ion into more than 100 cases of alleged sexual abuse at The Thacher School in Ojai, northwest of Los Angeles.

However most cases were decades old, with some dating back to the 1960s, and the statute of limitation­s to file charges had expired, the DA’s office and Sheriff’s Department said in a joint statement.

In 43 cases, the victims couldn’t be reached or declined to participat­e while in another 30, investigat­ors determined that no crime had occurred, sheriff’s Sgt. Ryan Clark said, according to the Ventura County Star.

Only three cases actually were brought to the district attorney’s office last year for possible prosecutio­n but charges couldn’t be brought because of the expired statute of limitation­s, the statement said.

The other cases weren’t submitted to the DA’s office because “they fell clearly outside the statute of limitation­s, the victims sought no prosecutio­n, or no crime could be establishe­d,” the release said.

“Our inability to bring charges should not be seen as endorsing what happened over the years at Thacher,” said Deputy District Attorney Brent Nibecker, according to the Star. “Numerous children were victimized. Adults entrusted with their care violated that trust.”

Last year, the Thacher School released a 90-page report by a law firm it hired to investigat­e allegation­s made in an alumni social media campaign. The report detailed episodes of alleged rape, groping, unwanted touching and inappropri­ate comments going back 40 years, the Los Angeles Times reported at the time.

It specified six alleged perpetrato­rs and described alleged efforts by former administra­tors to cover up complaints and blame victims.

County authoritie­s said the Thacher School cooperated — but also said the school’s decision to order an independen­t investigat­ion and then publicly release the results hampered the criminal probe.

Some suspects who

were publicly identified refused to be interviewe­d, referred questions to their lawyers, or took steps to avoid contact with law enforcemen­t altogether, the press release said.

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

“To survivors of sexual misconduct and their families in our community, we are deeply sorry,” Yih wrote.

The board of trustees acknowledg­ed a “profound” impact on students because of the failure to exert proper oversight.

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