The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Men suing over sex abuse want new judge

- By Kantele Franko

COLUMBUS » Some of the hundreds of men who sued Ohio State over its failure to stop sexual abuse by a team doctor are seeking the recusal of the federal judge overseeing the remaining unsettled cases after he disclosed this month that his wife’s business has ties with the university.

The attorneys involved already knew U.S. District Court Judge Michael Watson is an adjunct professor for OSU’s law school, and over the past three years they hadn’t objected to his handling the cases related to decades-old misconduct by the late Dr. Richard Strauss.

But informatio­n about the judge’s wife’s business prompted lawyers for some of the men to request a recusal and ask that the cases be moved to Cincinnati, noting that other federal judges in Columbus also have connection­s to the university.

They said the financial connection raises questions about the judge’s impartiali­ty and could at least give the appearance he’s partial to Ohio State.

“But whether the conflict is real or apparent, the fact is that these plaintiffs, who were abused as teenage boys by the combined power of OSU and its team doctor, will never get justice in Columbus,” attorneys for one set of plaintiffs argued in one of the filings.

Another filing noted that the judge and his wife participat­ed in the Buckeye Cruise for Cancer fundraiser for OSU’s cancer center and said that also could raise questions about whether he’s perceived as impartial.

Ohio State responded with its own filings saying recusal is unwarrante­d, and alleging an improper “eleventh-hour attempt at forum shopping” based on business dealings unrelated to the litigation.

Watson’s wife owns a flag business that has long been licensed to sell Ohio State merchandis­e and pays a 12% royalty to use its trademarks.

The Flag Lady’s Flag Store also is one of about 34,000 vendors from which Ohio State purchases products and services, and the university spent less than $16,000 at the store in fiscal year 2021, school spokespers­on Benjamin Johnson said.

Johnson said the Buckeye Cruise for Cancer is an independen­t entity.

Watson pointed out the licensing tie to attorneys in the Strauss cases after an NBC News Digital reporter asked the court about it, according to a court transcript.

Watson told them he and his wife don’t have financial interests in the university that would require his recusal under the code of conduct for federal judges, but that he wanted to give the lawyers a chance to address it if they felt his impartiali­ty was compromise­d.

The recusal issue arises just as the parties involved were anticipati­ng the judge would finally rule this month on whether to dismiss the remaining lawsuits based on legal time limits for bringing such cases. Now, oral arguments on that matter have been delayed.

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