University of Southern California
president to step down in wake of scandal
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[May 26, 2018]
(Reuters) - The president of
University of Southern California is resigning after criticism over the
school's handling of complaints that a campus health clinic gynecologist
sexually abused his patients during pelvic exams, the school said on
Friday.
C.L. Max Nikias will step down after serving as the school's president
for nearly eight years, the university's executive committee of the
board of trustees said in a statement.
"President Nikias and the Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees
have agreed to begin an orderly transition and commence the process of
selecting a new president," committee chairman Rick Caruso said.
Nikias could not be reached immediately for comment.
His resignation comes three days after 200 faculty members demanded in
an open letter he quit as USC faces a rising tide of litigation accusing
Dr. George Tyndall of misconduct and the university of complicity and
negligence.
Tyndall resigned from the university last year after an internal inquiry
found his pelvic examination practices were beyond accepted medical
standards and that he had harassed patients.
"I share your outrage and understand the frustration and anger regarding
the situation with the former physician," Caruso said.
Tyndall, 71, could not be reached by Reuters for comment. However, he
has denied wrongdoing in interviews with the Los Angeles Times.
More than 2,200 students, alumni and others at USC, one of the most
prestigious private U.S. higher education institutions, signed a
separate online petition calling for Nikias' ouster as the campus reeled
from its third major personnel scandal since last year.
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The University of Southern California is pictured in Los Angeles,
California, U.S., May 22, 2018. REUTERS/Mike Blake
The university has acknowledged failing to properly act on at least
eight complaints made against Tyndall between 2000 and 2014. Several
former patients filed civil lawsuits during the week and one new
accusation lodged in a sworn declaration released on Tuesday dates
back to 1991.
The university recently brought the situation to the attention of
the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office, which referred
the matter on May 9 to the Los Angeles Police Department "to
investigate potential criminal misconduct," a spokesman for the
district attorney's office said in an email.
LAPD spokesman Tony Im said police have no active criminal
investigation into the matter.
Nikias came under fire last year over accusations of chronic drug
abuse by a former USC medical school dean and allegations of sexual
harassment by another medical school dean.
Those scandals were cited in both the faculty letter and the online
petition as evidence of Nikias' failures as president.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee)
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