U-M investigating allegations against late doctor

NCAAF

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Several former patients have alleged that a late University of Michigan physician sexually abused them during exams going back decades, prompting the Ann Arbor school to ask others with information to come forward, officials said Wednesday.

The university said in a statement that an outside, independent investigation has been launched into the allegations against Robert E. Anderson, the former director of University Health Service and an athletic team physician. He worked at Michigan from 1968 until his retirement in 2003. He died in 2008.

The revelations stem from a former university athlete who wrote to athletic director Warde Manuel in 2018 alleging abuse by Anderson during medical exams in the early 1970s. Subsequent interviews with dozens of other former students uncovered several more allegations of similar misconduct and unnecessary medical exams during that era as well as at least one incident as late as the 1990s.

“The allegations that were reported are disturbing and very serious,” university President Mark Schlissel said in a statement. “We promptly began a police investigation and cooperated fully with the prosecutor’s office.”

Officials say they are making the information public now following a determination Tuesday by the Washtenaw County prosecutor’s office that no criminal charges would be authorized.

Schlissel added that determining who else might have been affected and getting additional information from them includes setting up a “Compliance Hotline” at 866-990-0111.

The outside review is being conducted the Washington, D.C.-based law firm Steptoe & Johnson.

The allegations include instances of abuse at other universities. An Ohio State University sports physician, Dr. Richard Strauss, was also accused of abusing students over nearly two decades beginning in the late 1970s. Since those allegations first arose in 2018, the school says it has learned of more than 1,000 instances of alleged sexual misconduct by the late doctor.

In another high-profile case involving a university sports doctor, more than 300 people, mostly young women and girls, say former sports doctor Larry Nassar molested them under the guise of treatment for back problems and other injuries. Nassar, who worked at Michigan State University and USA Gymnastics and also saw athletes who were referred to him, is serving what are effectively life sentences for child porn possession and sexually assaulting young women and girls.

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