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University of Southern California President C.L. Max Nikias agrees to step down amid growing outrage over allegations that the school’s former gynecologist had molested students for many years. Photo: AFP/Getty Images North America

USC’s president agrees to step down amid growing outrage over scandals

He agrees to step down amid growing outrage over allegations that the school’s former gynecologist had molested students for many years

The president of the University of Southern California agreed to step down, the school’s board of trustees announced Friday night, amid growing outrage over allegations that the school’s former gynecologist had molested students for many years.

C.L. Max Nikias has led USC since 2010, pushing the private research university to more global ambitions, higher academic prestige and considerable fundraising prowess.

200 professors call on US university president to quit over gynaecologist George Tyndall, ‘who preyed on Chinese students’

But in the past year, scandals – and the way the administration handled them – came to overshadow his successes, and led to a torrent of calls for his resignation.

Attorney Gloria Allred listens as her client, Danielle Mohazab, speaks about an alleged incident during a 2016 exam with University of Southern California gynecologist George Tyndall at the school’s health center during a news conference in Los Angeles, California on May 22. Photo: Reuters

Last week, the Los Angeles Times reported that the university had let a gynecologist at the school’s health clinic continue to treat students for years despite complaints about his behaviour.

Within days, hundreds of women said that they had been victimised by George Tyndall, who had been a doctor there for more than 30 years.

Multiple lawsuits were filed, claiming that Tyndall repeatedly sexually abused patients and that the university did not act on complaints.

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Tyndall could not be reached for comment, but he defended his exams as medically appropriate in an interview with the Los Angeles Times last week.

He was placed on administrative leave in 2016 and later reached a separation agreement with the university, according to USC officials.

John Manly, an lawyer who is representing more than 80 women in lawsuits against USC, has compared the university’s response to complaints about Tyndall to the way Michigan State University leaders responded to women saying they had been molested by Larry Nassar, who had been a doctor there.

Manly was the lead lawyer in a US$500 million settlement reached with Michigan State last week.

An undated handout photo of George Tyndall. Photo: TNS

The university’s Academic Senate formally asked for Nikias’ resignation Wednesday, more than 8,000 people signed an online petition of alumni demanding USC “hold administrators responsible for supporting sexual predators,” more than 4,000 people signed another online petition calling for Nikias’ resignation, and student leaders demanded answers.

Many were upset not only by the allegations involving Tyndall.

In the summer, the Los Angeles Times reported that the former dean of the Keck School of Medicine was abusing illegal drugs even in his office at USC. Just months later, the dean who replaced him resigned after allegations of sexual harassment.

In repeated instances, according to a letter signed by 200 senior faculty members, the university had chosen to make financial settlements and cover up wrongdoing. They called on Nikias to resign and the board to “restore moral leadership to the university.”

The board’s chairman expressed strong support for Nikias’ presidency earlier this week. But on Friday, trustees responded to the outpouring of anger.

“We have heard the message that something is broken and that urgent and profound actions are needed,” Rick Caruso, chairman of the subcommittee of the executive committee of the USC board of trustees, wrote to the campus community Friday. “Today, 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.”

The board pledged to “rebuild our culture to reflect an environment in which safety and transparency are of paramount importance, and to institute systemic change that will prevent this from occurring in the future. There is nothing more sacred to this board than the wellbeing of our students. We will be guided solely by what is in the best interest of this great university.”

The University of Southern California's Engemann Student Health Center in Los Angeles on May 22. Photo: AP

Manly said in a statement Friday night the resignation “is the first step in a long process of healing for the victims of Dr. Tyndall,” one that happened because the campus community pressured the board to do the right thing. “It is our hope that their pressure will continue until the University reforms the culture which has enabled sexual abuse and holds all of the enablers accountable so this will never happen again.”

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Hilary Schor, a professor of English and law at USC and an author of the letter sent by faculty, said Saturday she was thrilled the board listened to the voices of concern about Nikias. “I think that he really failed to understand the depth of the charges,” the horror felt by many in the campus community and the pervasive sense that their trust in the university had been betrayed, she said.

Schor praised Nikias’ achievements in fundraising, building new programmes; taking the university onto the global stage; encouraging entrepreneurial vision; holding the values of the arts, humanities and sciences in high esteem; and committing the university to combat social problems. 

Lawsuit says University of Southern California turned blind eye as gynaecologist George Tyndall molested Chinese students

“That kind of vision is rare. His skill in telling the story of USC and attracting donors and faculty is remarkable,” Schor said. “. . . But I fear the university, in its quest for rankings and its quest for prestige has left behind some of its moral values – and this is a wake-up call for all of us. You cannot be a great teaching and research university without being a place of morality and justice for all. ”

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: USC president agrees to step down over scandals
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