The University of California in the United States has agreed to pay $73 million to settle a lawsuit raised by several women, who alleged they were sexually abused by a former gynecologist employed by the university.
Patients have
accused Dr James Heaps, 63, of misconduct throughout his the decades he worked
at the university.
More than
6,600 patients of the accused could receive a part of the payment even if they
have not accused the former doctor of misconduct once a judge approves the
settlement.
Heaps worked
part-time as gynecologist at the student health center from 1983 to 2010 and
was later hired by UCLA Health in 2014. His patients have alleged that he made
sexually inappropriate comments during their appointments and touched women
sexually during exams without wearing gloves.
The agreement
filed Monday also asked the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) to
undertake reform measures, including training on boundaries between students
and lecturers, advertising of patient reporting options, compliance monitoring
and probes into possible misconduct allegations.
Heaps was
arrested in June 2019 and charged with sexual battery of two former patients in
2017 and 2018. He has pleaded not guilty to the charges.
Following his
arrest, and the rise of the MeToo movement, several other women came forward
with sexual allegations against the doctor.
Since then,
the university says Heaps saw about 5,000 patients during his career at UCLA in
addition to an estimated 1,600 women, whose records are no longer available.
Patients can
seek amounts of $250,000 or higher in certain cases and the settlement does not
require Heaps to acknowledge any wrongdoing.
“The
incidents described in the lawsuit reflect alleged conduct that is contrary to
our values,” UCLA Health said Monday in a statement.
“We thank the
individuals who came forward and hope that this settlement – which is still
subject to court approval – is one small step forward for the patients
involved.”
The
settlement is separate from criminal charges against Heaps, whose medical
license has been suspended.
He has
pleaded not guilty to the charges involving seven women and denied wrongdoing.
He is to
appear in court on December 7.

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