Campus Gynecologist Dies While Awaiting Assault Trial

George Tyndall's lawyer reports no indication of suicide or foul play
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Oct 5, 2023 3:05 PM CDT
Campus Gynecologist Dies While Awaiting Assault Trial
George Tyndall listens during his arraignment at Los Angeles Superior Court in Los Angeles in 2019.   (AP Photo/Richard Vogel, File)

A former University of Southern California campus gynecologist charged with sexually assaulting numerous students was found dead Wednesday in his home, his lawyer said. Leonard Levine, George Tyndall's defense attorney, confirmed the death on Thursday, the AP reports. Tyndall, who was in his mid-70s, was awaiting trial on 35 criminal counts of sexual misconduct between 2009 and 2016 at the university's student health center. He pleaded not guilty in 2019 and was free on bond. A friend went to Tyndall's home in Los Angeles on Wednesday after he had not answered her phone calls, Levine said. She found him dead in his bed.

While the coroner's office will do an autopsy, Levine said there is "no evidence of foul play or suicide." Levine said Tyndall was due back in court this month to set a date for his trial. "He's always maintained his innocence," Levine said. Hundreds of women came forward to report their allegations to police, but some of the cases fell outside the 10-year statute of limitations, while others did not rise to the level of criminal charges or lacked sufficient evidence to prosecute. Still, Tyndall faced up to 64 years in prison if convicted. Even as the criminal case was pending, USC agreed to an $852 million settlement with more than 700 women who accused the college's longtime campus gynecologist of sexual abuse, the victims' lawyers and USC announced in 2021.

Tyndall was deposed for the settlement and largely invoked his right against self-incrimination in answers, the plaintiffs' lawyers said, per the AP. While he signed the settlement, he did not contribute any money toward it and did not admit to any wrongdoing. Separately, USC earlier agreed to pay $215 million to settle a class-action lawsuit that applies to about 18,000 women who were patients of Tyndall. Allegations against Tyndall first surfaced in 2018 in an investigation by the Los Angeles Times, which revealed that the doctor had been the subject of complaints dating to the 1990s. He wasn't suspended until 2016, when a nurse reported him to a rape crisis center. He quietly resigned with a large payout the next year.

(More George Tyndall stories.)

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