Mushrooming Scandal: More students have come forward claiming George Finkelstein (left inset) and Macy Gordon (right inset) had inappropriate sexual contact with them at Yeshiva University High School for Boys and elsewhere.
Six more people have come
forward with accusations against Yeshiva University, days after 19 former high
school students filed a $380 million suit charging that Y.U. covered up decades
of physical and sexual abuse.
Mike Reck, an attorney
representing the six, said his clients are disappointed they have been unable
to reach a settlement with Y.U. and are poised to file lawsuits.
If the impasse continues, “the
survivors have no choice but to avail themselves of the court system,” said
Reck, an attorney with the New York office of Jeff Anderson and Associates, a
Minnesota firm that specializes in abuse cases.
So far, two former Y.U. high
school staff members and a former Y.U. student have been accused of abuse in
the lawsuit already filed. Reck says his clients’ suit could reveal three
additional people as accused molesters.
His clients, the attorney
said, include people who were abused by Rabbi George Finkelstein, a former
principal of Y.U.’s Manhattan boys high school. Most say they were assaulted between
1969 and the early ’80s. But Reck says he also represents a woman who says she
was abused by Finkelstein during the 1990s, when Finkelstein was dean of the
Samuel Scheck Hillel Community Day School, in Florida.
The woman blames Y.U. for
failing to warn the Florida school about Finkelstein even though administrators
knew he posed a threat to children when he took up the post in North Miami
Beach in 1995.
More than a dozen former
students at Y.U.’s Manhattan high school have told the Forward that Finkelstein
had inappropriate sexual contact with boys under the guise of wrestling.
Rabbi Norman Lamm, who was
president of Y.U. from 1976 until 2003 and just retired as chancellor, told the
Forward this past December that Finkelstein was forced out of Y.U. because of
his wrestling with boys. Lamm said Y.U. did not inform the Florida school about
Finkelstein’s wrestling because “the responsibility of a school in hiring
someone is to check with the previous job. No one checked with me about
George.”
Finkelstein was alleged to
have abused 16 of the former students named in the lawsuit filed July 8 in U.S.
District Court in White Plains, N.Y. The suit alleges a “massive cover-up of
the sexual abuse of [high school] students… facilitated, for several decades,
by various prominent Y.U. and [high school] administrators, trustees, directors
and other faculty members.”
The assaults are alleged to
have taken place during the 1970s and ’80s, at a time when Y.U. faced severe
financial problems.
Y.U. said in a statement that
it would not comment on ongoing litigation. A spokesman told The New York Times
that Y.U. hoped an investigation it commissioned to look into the abuse
allegations would be finalized in the coming weeks. “We will address the
findings publicly once the report is issued,” the spokesman said.
Rabbi Haskel Lookstein,
principal of the Ramaz School, a respected Orthodox day school in Manhattan,
said the abuse allegations had not had “any effect on parents’ decision to
send, nor do I think it should have any effect on parents’ decision to send,
their children to [Y.U.’s] high school or the college.”
Shmuel Goldin, a leading
Modern Orthodox rabbi, said Y.U.’s response to the allegations has been “prompt
and thorough.”
Goldin added, “There is a
sadness that everyone feels when people have been hurt, and a sense of
solidarity with the victims and a hope this will reach a resolution that will
bring peace and healing to all involved.”
When does wrestling count as sexual assault?
ReplyDeleteThe lawsuit against Y.U. has now topped six hundred million dollars, as of 26th August 2013.
ReplyDelete