
Doctor accused of abusing Indiana University athletes is dead at age 89
The longtime Indiana University doctor accused of sexually abusing basketball players has died, but the lawsuit accusing the school's trustees and a former athletic trainer of turning a blind eye to the alleged abuse lives on.
Dr. Bradford Bomba Sr., who has been accused of performing unnecessary rectal examinations on several generations of Hoosiers players, died on May 8 while receiving hospice care in his hometown of Bloomington, Indiana, according to his obituary. He was 89.
His death comes a week after a law firm hired by the university concluded that the doctor did not act 'in bad faith or with an improper purpose' when he performed the exams on hundreds of young players during routine physicals.
But in the same report, medical experts brought on by the Jones Day law firm to help conduct the independent investigation wrote that 'it was uncommon' for physicians to perform invasive exams like this on 'college-age student athletes without pertinent history of complaints.'
Kathleen DeLaney, who represents five former Indiana players in the federal lawsuit, said Bomba's death does not derail their case. Bomba is not named as a defendant.
In December Bomba testified via video in a deposition ordered by the federal judge presiding over the lawsuit. During the deposition, Bomba invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination dozens of times, according to a transcript of his testimony.
'We will be able to use that testimony, so we do not believe that Dr. Bomba's death will impact our case,' Delaney wrote in an emailed response Tuesday to NBC News. 'IU does not challenge that Dr. Bomba systematically and over decades penetrated the rectums of young, healthy male elite athletes.'
IU did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the death of Bomba, who provided medical care to all of its sports teams from 1962 to 1970 and was the men's basketball team physician from 1979 until the late 1990s.
Born in Chicago, Bradford played football for Indiana University and was drafted by the Washington Redskins in 1957 but left the team after four preseason games to attend IU's school of medicine, his obituary states.
Bomba was long retired when Haris Mujezinovic and Charlie Miller, who played for the Hoosiers in the 1990s under legendary coach Bob Knight, said in a lawsuit filed in October in U.S. District Court for Southern Indiana that the coaches and trainers were aware that Bomba was subjecting basketball players to unnecessary prostate examinations and did nothing to stop him.
Knight, who was described as a 'close friend' in Bomba's obituary, died two years ago at age 83.
The former Hoosiers players sued under Title IX, a federal law that requires all colleges and universities that receive federal funds to put safeguards in place to protect students from discrimination based on sex, including sexual harassment and sexual violence.
Since October, three other former players joined the class action lawsuit against the IU trustees and former athletic trainer Tim Garl.
Both the IU trustees and Garl have filed motions seeking to dismiss the lawsuit against them, court records show. Garl, who had been the head men's basketball trainer at the school since 1981, was informed in April that IU would not be renewing his contract.
The Jones Day report called Garl's behavior 'unprofessional' for 'razzing' players about the rectal exams at the hands of Bomba.

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Daily Mail
04-06-2025
- Daily Mail
Bobby Knight and Indiana officials 'knew about sex abuse allegations against team doctor', new accusers claim
The late Bobby Knight and other high-ranking Indiana University officials were aware of improper sexual contact claims against deceased athletic department physician Dr. Bradford Bomba but failed to act, according to new allegations published by ESPN. Two former Hoosiers players sued the school last fall over the allegations, but they have since been joined in their lawsuit by five more claimants with another 10 expected to join, according to ESPN. In the existing lawsuit, former players allege that Bomba regularly performed rectal exams on male athletes during physicals despite the fact that medical guidance did not recommend them for college-age men. The accusers say Indiana officials, including Knight, ignored complaints by players and instead ordered them to continue being examined by Bomba. The lawsuit argued that this amounted to sexual misconduct, and it claimed university officials were aware of this behavior, yet failed to stop it. During his initial deposition a year ago, Bomba refused to answer 45 questions by invoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. He died last month at 89 after a federal judge ruled he was not competent to be further deposed in the matter. Last month, Indiana commissioned an investigation that found Bomba's digital rectal exams were performed in a 'clinically appropriate manner,' adding that there was 'no evidence to suggest that Dr. Bomba achieved sexual gratification.' The report claimed players would 'joke or engage in what they characterized as 'locker room banter"' about Bomba's exams. Garl described the behavior as 'razzing' and claimed no player ever complained about the exams to him as 'being inappropriate or sexual in any manner.' However, Michelle Simpson Tuegel - representing the group of 10 players who are preparing to file suit – said two of her clients contradict that finding. One individual said Bomba 'fondled his genitalia' during a physical. Some medical experts indicated that it was uncommon for a physician to perform a rectal exam without any concerning history or symptoms. These procedures are generally used to screen for prostate and other cancers. In the 1990s, the American Cancer Society recommended them for men who were 50 and older. Former Toronto Raptors coach and Hoosiers guard Butch Carter is not a plaintiff in the suit but ESPN reported he gave a sworn statement describing his own experiences with Bomba. In his statement, previously reported in March, Carter claimed he told Knight about the problem, but the legendary Hoosiers coach and head athletic trainer Tim Garl ordered him to see Bomba anyway. Other claimants have made similar allegations. An Indiana University spokesperson declined to comment on the lawsuit, citing pending litigation. Daily Mail has also sought comment from representatives of the Bomba family, Garl, and Knight Legacy LLC, the company owned by the Hall-of-Fame coach's son, Pat. Garl, who is named as a defendant in the lawsuit, was the head athletic trainer from 1981 until this year, when Indiana said it would not renew his contract. Garl's attorneys spoke to ESPN, claiming the trainer did not supervise Bomba and adding that rectal exams were a normal part of a physical. Knight was among the winningest and most controversial coaches in the sport, finishing his career with 902 victories in 42 seasons at Army, Indiana and Texas Tech while mentoring some of America's best coaches.. He also coached the U.S. Olympic team to a gold medal in 1984. The Hall of Famer cared little what others thought of him, choosing Frank Sinatra's 'My Way' to celebrate his 880th win in 2007, then the record for a Division I men's coach. He was nicknamed 'The General' and his trademark temper also cost him his job at Indiana in 2000. He once hit a police officer in Puerto Rico, threw a chair across the court and was accused of wrapping his hands around a player's neck. Knight died in 2023 after battling a number of health issues. The case against Indiana and Bomba is reminiscent of other Big 10 scandals, including sexual abuse convictions of former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky and ex-Michigan State doctor Larry Nassar, as well as major lawsuits against Ohio State and Michigan over similar claims about physicians at those schools. Sandusky's arrest would ultimately tarnish the legacy of legendary Nittany Lions football coach Joe Paterno, who died during the mushrooming 2012 scandal, as well as late Wolverines football coach Bo Schembechler. In Schembechler's case, his son Matt was among the accusers of Dr. Robert Anderson. Matt Schembechler has since accused his late father of failing to protect him from Anderson, who died in 2008. The Ohio State scandal involved allegations of sexual abuse against Dr. Richard Strauss, who died by suicide in 2005. Several ex-Buckeyes wrestlers accused former head coach Russ Hellickson and U.S. representative Jim Jordan – an assistant coach on the team – of ignoring abuse claims between 1987 and 1994.


The Independent
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President Donald Trump on Tuesday threatened to withhold federal funds from California over an unnamed transgender competitor's victory in a high school athletic competition and purported to command the state's scholastic athletic governing body to ban the athlete in question from an upcoming state championship competition. Writing on Truth Social, Trump accused California Governor Gavin Newsom of having 'illegally' allowed 'men to play in women's sports' and complained that an unidentified 'transitioned male athlete at a major event' had 'won 'everything'' and qualified for 'state finals' to be run next weekend. 'As a Male, he was a less than average competitor. As a Female, this transitioned person is practically unbeatable. THIS IS NOT FAIR, AND TOTALLY DEMEANING TO WOMEN AND GIRLS,' Trump said. Continuing, Trump said he was advising that 'large scale federal funding' could be 'held back, maybe permanently' if the athlete he was referring to is permitted to continue competing, citing a February executive order authorizing the Department of Education to sanction schools that allow transgender athletes to compete for violating Title IX prohibitions on sexual discrimination in schools. He also said he would be speaking with Newsom later in the day to discuss the matter. 'In the meantime I am ordering local authorities, if necessary, to not allow the transitioned person to compete in the State Finals,' he said before adding that the situation was 'totally ridiculous.' It wasn't immediately clear what 'local authorities' Trump was purporting to be 'ordering,' since the president doesn't have any ability to order local authorities to do anything. It was also unclear what event or athlete was being referenced in the president's social media post, but in recent days a number of right-wing media outlets have highlighted the case of a California teenager who'd taken second in a long jump competition in last week's California Interscholastic Federation's Southern Section Masters track and field meet. According to multiple reports, the athlete in question, AB Hernandez, has won multiple competitions and has incensed parents and some fellow competitors, one of whom reportedly posed for a photograph atop a medal podium after taking second place to Hernandez in long jump. The Daily Mail also reported that Hernandez's mother was confronted by other parents at the meet who accused the woman of being 'a coward of a woman' by allowing her child to compete.


NBC News
13-05-2025
- NBC News
Doctor accused of abusing Indiana University athletes is dead at age 89
The longtime Indiana University doctor accused of sexually abusing basketball players has died, but the lawsuit accusing the school's trustees and a former athletic trainer of turning a blind eye to the alleged abuse lives on. Dr. Bradford Bomba Sr., who has been accused of performing unnecessary rectal examinations on several generations of Hoosiers players, died on May 8 while receiving hospice care in his hometown of Bloomington, Indiana, according to his obituary. He was 89. His death comes a week after a law firm hired by the university concluded that the doctor did not act 'in bad faith or with an improper purpose' when he performed the exams on hundreds of young players during routine physicals. But in the same report, medical experts brought on by the Jones Day law firm to help conduct the independent investigation wrote that 'it was uncommon' for physicians to perform invasive exams like this on 'college-age student athletes without pertinent history of complaints.' Kathleen DeLaney, who represents five former Indiana players in the federal lawsuit, said Bomba's death does not derail their case. Bomba is not named as a defendant. In December Bomba testified via video in a deposition ordered by the federal judge presiding over the lawsuit. During the deposition, Bomba invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination dozens of times, according to a transcript of his testimony. 'We will be able to use that testimony, so we do not believe that Dr. Bomba's death will impact our case,' Delaney wrote in an emailed response Tuesday to NBC News. 'IU does not challenge that Dr. Bomba systematically and over decades penetrated the rectums of young, healthy male elite athletes.' IU did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the death of Bomba, who provided medical care to all of its sports teams from 1962 to 1970 and was the men's basketball team physician from 1979 until the late 1990s. Born in Chicago, Bradford played football for Indiana University and was drafted by the Washington Redskins in 1957 but left the team after four preseason games to attend IU's school of medicine, his obituary states. Bomba was long retired when Haris Mujezinovic and Charlie Miller, who played for the Hoosiers in the 1990s under legendary coach Bob Knight, said in a lawsuit filed in October in U.S. District Court for Southern Indiana that the coaches and trainers were aware that Bomba was subjecting basketball players to unnecessary prostate examinations and did nothing to stop him. Knight, who was described as a 'close friend' in Bomba's obituary, died two years ago at age 83. The former Hoosiers players sued under Title IX, a federal law that requires all colleges and universities that receive federal funds to put safeguards in place to protect students from discrimination based on sex, including sexual harassment and sexual violence. Since October, three other former players joined the class action lawsuit against the IU trustees and former athletic trainer Tim Garl. Both the IU trustees and Garl have filed motions seeking to dismiss the lawsuit against them, court records show. Garl, who had been the head men's basketball trainer at the school since 1981, was informed in April that IU would not be renewing his contract. The Jones Day report called Garl's behavior 'unprofessional' for 'razzing' players about the rectal exams at the hands of Bomba.