The Mercury News

Ohio State settles some suits over doctor

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COLUMBUS, OHIO » Ohio State reached an unspecifie­d settlement with nearly half of the roughly 350 men who say they were sexually abused decades ago by a team doctor who was jokingly known among some athletes by nicknames like “Dr. Jelly Paws.”

The settlement announced Friday is the first for accusers of the late Richard Strauss, who say the doctor groped and otherwise mistreated students for two decades while school officials knew about concerns but did little to stop him.

With the settlement not yet finalized, the school and others involved are staying mum about how much would be paid.

Ohio State said in a statement that a special overseer independen­t of the university will help allocate the funds to individual accusers based on their experience­s and the harm done. The payments will come from “existing institutio­nal discretion­ary funding,” not tuition or taxpayer or donor money, according to the school.

Rick Schulte, a lawyer who represente­d former Ohio State football players, wrestlers and other athletes, said the settlement will help the men move forward and heal. Schulte and university officials wouldn’t say whether specifics of the settlement had yet been shared with the affected plaintiffs.

“Strauss’ conduct was reprehensi­ble, and the university’s failures at the time are completely unacceptab­le,” Ohio State President Michael Drake said in the Friday statement. “While nothing can undo what happened here years ago, today’s university has a responsibi­lity to support our former students and alumni, and this initial settlement is another important step in the process of restorativ­e justice.”

Mike DiSabato, the exwrestler whose claims in 2018 helped prompt the university to have a law firm investigat­e allegation­s about the doctor, said the settlement isn’t what he hoped but “is a deal that allows us to move forward with closure.”

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