Chuck Christian (second row, sitting above #53) in the 1980 team photo [Bentley Image Bank]

Countless Comment Count

Ace May 12th, 2021 at 4:11 PM

Content warning: descriptions of sexual abuse.

Chuck Christian is dying of prostate cancer. He's 61 years old.

Christian came forward as one of Dr. Robert Anderson's many victims of sexual abuse over a year ago. By that time, he'd already outlived the terminal prognosis he received four years earlier. His story is devastating.

It was as much odd as it was alarming, then, when Christian started to find blood in his bodily fluids in the early 2000s. He begrudgingly made an appointment to get checked out. After a few tests, the doctor informed Christian that he needed a digital exam to make sure his prostate was functioning properly. Christian assumed that would mean some type of technological scan followed by images on a computer screen. Then the doctor turned to pull on a pair of gloves and lubricate his finger.

"Just hearing that glove snap, it was like, 'Oh, God, no,'" Christian said. "I just kind of freaked out. I said never again. So I left, and we never had the test done."

Christian's wife finally insisted he see a urologist and go through with a prostate exam when he began waking up to go to the bathroom "a dozen times a night" in 2016. He'd never told her why he so resisted seeking medical treatment.

In fact, at least in part because Anderson remained a respected figure within Michigan's athletic department, Christian didn't consider himself a victim of sexual abuse until a former teammate informed him of another victim's letter to Warde Manuel—and a burgeoning number of former athletes saying they'd been violated by Anderson, too.

Anderson worked at the University of Michigan from 1966 until 2003. When he died in 2008, his peers spoke fondly of him.

Former Michigan football coach Lloyd Carr, who once worked with Anderson, said people used to joke that Anderson was the poorest doctor in Ann Arbor because he worked for the Athletic Department at a lower pay rate than what the average doctor would make.

“If any of us didn’t feel well or had the flu or our kids were sick, we had the comfort of knowing that he was going to drop what he was doing,” Carr said. “He was a tremendous asset in this community.”

For four decades, Christian didn't believe he was a victim. This is the abuse he experienced.

He waited in a lobby for several minutes, along with another freshman from the football program, before going to Anderson's office alone. The short, stout doctor ran through some routine tests. Then Christian says Anderson told him to remove his shorts and bend over the exam table for a purported prostate exam.

Christian says he howled while Anderson put his fingers inside of him.

"He was a fat doctor with fat fingers. That hurt like crazy," he said. "I was screaming in pain, but I knew not to scream at him because I knew I had to do that to play. It wasn't going to do me any good to scream at him."

Christian remembers leaving the exam room and spotting the classmate who had been with him in the lobby. Christian's face prompted the other young man to ask if Anderson had done it to him, too.

"Oh, yes, what was that?" Christian said. "I feel violated."

"Me, too, man," the teammate said. "Me, too."

There's no medical reason to conduct a prostate exam on a healthy 18-year-old. Christian stayed in the football program for four years, as champions do, and saw Anderson for a physical prior to every season. He didn't mention continued abuse to an authority figure. It was just how things were done at Michigan; after all, Anderson had been a team doctor since 1967, and Christian feared he'd fail his physical and lose his scholarship if he didn't allow Anderson to violate him.

[Hit THE JUMP.]

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wrestler Andy Hrovat and football player Dwight Hicks both were abused by Anderson [Bentley]

By the time Christian first saw Anderson, the doctor had a history of abuse, some of which had been reported to authorities at the university. This has been confirmed in reporting over the past two years and the 240-page report released yesterday by the law firm WilmerHale, which the school hired as an independent investigator.

Even if word had somehow not spread around campus about Anderson by the time Christian arrived in Ann Arbor in 1977, a wrestler named Tad DeLuca had already detailed extensive abuse when he was supposed to be receiving treatment for ailments—a dislocated elbow, for instance—that certainly didn't require rectal and genital examinations. According to WilmerHale's report, authorities at U-M continued to ignore repeated warnings about Anderson for decades:

First, in July 1975, Tad DeLuca, a member of the wrestling team, sent a letter to head wrestling coach Bill Johannesen and assistant wrestling coach Cal Jenkins that, among other things, included a complaint about Dr. Anderson. Neither Mr. Johannesen nor Mr. Jenkins inquired about Dr. Anderson’s conduct or referred the matter for investigation by others.

Second, in or around 1979 to 1981, senior University administrator Thomas Easthope received complaints regarding Dr. Anderson’s misconduct on at least three separate occasions. Mr. Easthope, who had supervisory authority over UHS, was told directly and explicitly about Dr. Anderson’s misconduct and failed to take proper action to address it.

Third, the University failed to investigate persistent and widespread rumors about Dr. Anderson. We found that at least some personnel in UHS and the Athletic Department heard or were aware of jokes, banter, and innuendo about Dr. Anderson’s conduct with patients, but they did not recognize such comments as cause for concern.

Fourth, the University did not conduct due diligence with respect to a 1995 lawsuit alleging that Dr. Anderson assaulted a patient during a pre-employment physical. Dr. Anderson himself disclosed the lawsuit on an application for Michigan Medicine credentials in September 1996.

The details of the report are sickening. The section titled "Dr. Anderson's Misconduct" is nine pages largely comprised of bullet-point summaries of accounts from his victims, whom he seemingly chose because of one vulnerability or another—students up for the draft during the Vietnam War, the LGBTQ community, patients who couldn't afford medication, athletes scared to lose their scholarships, and so on.

Their stories are harrowing. So, too, is the section's first paragraph.

Dr. Anderson committed sexual misconduct on countless occasions during his nearly four decades as a University employee. He engaged in practices that were improper in a clinical or educational setting—and would have been improper in any other setting. This finding is based on information received from almost 600 of Dr. Anderson’s former patients and interviews of more than 300 of those patients, approximately ninety percent of whom were male. We recognize that this group of patients represents only a fraction of the total patients treated by Dr. Anderson in University settings between the late 1960s and early 2000s. In all likelihood, Dr. Anderson abused many patients in addition to those who provided information to us.

"Countless occasions." The hundreds of victims who spoke to them representing "only a fraction" of his patient population. Four decades of abuse.

The devastation done to Chuck Christian alone is horrific. It's difficult, if not impossible, to fathom the physical pain, mental anguish, and, yes, years taken from lives caused by Anderson, and how much could've been stopped before it ever occurred.

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take it down [Bryan Fuller]

Bo Schembechler was in a position to do something about Robert Anderson. Schembechler, of course, was Michigan's revered head football coach from 1968 to 1989, served as the school's athletic director from 1988 to 1990, and until his death in 2006 maintained an office in the building that bears his name.

The idea that the most powerful and visible figure in the athletic department for decades wouldn't have heard about Anderson's abuse, even if just second- or third-hand, strained credulity even before former players said he knew. Schembechler's name appears multiple times in the WilmerHale report. He knew.

A member of the football team told us that Dr. Anderson gave him a rectal examination and fondled his testicles during a PPE in 1976. The student athlete told us he informed Coach Bo Schembechler that he did not want to receive any future physicals from Dr. Anderson and that “things were going down there that weren’t right.” According to the student athlete, Mr. Schembechler explained that annual PPEs were required to play football at the University. The patient continued to see Dr. Anderson and made no further reports about Dr. Anderson’s misconduct. Mr. Schembechler is deceased. The same student athlete told us that his position coach used the threat of an examination with Dr. Anderson as a motivational tool. We interviewed the coach, who denied the allegation.

A member of the football team in the late 1970s told DPSS that he received a genital examination from Dr. Anderson, who fondled his testicles, and a rectal examination, during which the student athlete pushed Dr. Anderson’s hand away. The student athlete told DPSS that he asked Mr. Schembechler “soon” after the exam, “What’s up with the finger in the butt treatment by Dr. Anderson?” According to the student athlete, Mr. Schembechler told him to “toughen up.” The student athlete told DPSS that “you do not mess with Bo, and the matter was dropped.” The student athlete, who is represented by counsel, declined our interview request.

Another student athlete told us Dr. Anderson conducted genital and rectal examinations during a PPE in the fall of 1982. The student athlete told us that during the examination Dr. Anderson “play[ed]” with the patient’s penis and made comments about its size. Following the examination, the student athlete told us he informed Mr. Schembechler that Dr. Anderson had “mess[ed]” with his penis and that he did not “agree” with the type of physical examination that Dr. Anderson performed. Mr. Schembechler reportedly told the student athlete that he would look into it, but the student athlete never heard anything further about it. The student athlete continued to see Dr. Anderson but did not raise the matter again, fearing that doing so could jeopardize his scholarship.

A student athlete alleges that Mr. Schembechler sent him to Dr. Anderson for migraines in the early 1980s. On at least three occasions, the student athlete alleges, Dr. Anderson gave the patient a digital rectal examination. The student athlete allegedly told Mr. Schembechler, who instructed him to report the matter to Athletic Director Don Canham. The patient alleges that he did so twice, in 1982 and 1983, but Mr. Canham took no action. The student athlete’s attorney declined our request to interview his client.

The only defense of Schembechler is a footnote that, given the multiple accounts contradicting it and common sense, probably could've gone unprinted: "Multiple University personnel who worked with Mr. Schembechler told us that had he been aware of Dr. Anderson’s misconduct with patients, he would not have tolerated it."

Bo Schembechler isn't the embodiment of evil. The world isn't that simple. He's no hero, either. He represented himself not just as a football coach but a figure of moral authority and a leader among leaders. By his own standard of leadership, let alone moral authority, he failed.

Schembechler said as much in "Bo's Lasting Lessons," his book on "teaching the timeless fundamentals of leadership" that was directed more towards businessmen than Michigan fans. This is the first paragraph of Chapter Six, which is titled "Do the Right Thing—Always."

Continuing to lionize Schembechler is an affront to Anderson's victims, sexual assault victims everywhere, and the principles of the University of Michigan. The same applies to his longtime athletic director, Don Canham, who was aware of the DeLuca letter and at least one other accusation against Anderson.

There's nothing that can bring justice to this tragedy. Anderson is long dead. So are Schembechler and Canham. The four decades of abuse and inaction cannot be undone, nor their far-reaching consequences. The least the school can do, however, is take down the statue, remove Schembechler's name from the football building, and take Canham's off the natatorium. They will still be remembered. They should not be revered.

Comments

JamesBondHerpesMeds

May 12th, 2021 at 4:22 PM ^

This is much worse than I imagined.

Bo is Michigan's Joe Paterno, and his legacy must now include this information as a headline, not a footnote. It starts by renaming Schembechler Hall. No excuses, no hesitation.

TallyWolverine

May 12th, 2021 at 11:26 PM ^

I feel like “The team. The team. The team”, and “Those who stay will be champions” should be removed from everything around the program. 

   The team, Bo? Those who stay will be what? Repeatedly assaulted? They seem hollow to me now, coming from a place of negligence....or worse. My opinion is- Bo can go fuck himself in his grave.

bluesparkhitsy…

May 13th, 2021 at 11:59 AM ^

Even if we take everything alleged about Bo as true (which I'm not arguing against), we still would be wrong not to also acknowledge the many good things he did, and the lessons he taught.  These quotes from Bo didn't suddenly become worthless or problematic simply because we may now accept he should have reported what he heard about Dr. Anderson.

WFNY_DP

May 13th, 2021 at 1:56 PM ^

These quotes from Bo didn't suddenly become worthless or problematic simply because we may now accept he should have reported what he heard about Dr. Anderson.

With all due respect, they DID. One cannot preach "The Team The Team The Team" and then turn a complete blind eye to horrific mistreatment of members of said Team.

"Report[ing] what he heard" isn't the equivalent of "I heard that some guy took a twenty out of the register". It was repeated sexual abuse. I know we always have to deal with the idea that "times were different" back then, kind of like everyone jokes about their grandparents being racist. That doesn't make it OK to hand-wave it away now when we absolutely know better.

Yost Ghost

May 13th, 2021 at 2:25 PM ^

Unfortunately the good things don't begin to make up for all the bad with the scope of this scandal.

The name on the building should change, the statue removed and his quotes forgotten. If this doesn't kill the tiresome "Michigan Man" concept then I don't know what will. It's time to stop revering the bully and move out from under his specter.

maquih

May 13th, 2021 at 6:59 PM ^

There's plenty of people who did good things and taught good lessons and didn't condone doctors raping their patients.  It's that simple.  Michigan has a long and proud history, and continues to make history -- we won't become thoughtless wanderers for confronting the truth of Schembechler's failed leadership.  

 

And if there was nothing left standing after we took down Schembechler's statue, that would still be the right thing to do.

When Bo died, I was an undergraduate.  I went to the vigil on the diag and it was first time I ever cried for somebody I never met.  But after reading the report, I have no choice but to confront the truth.

PopeLando

May 13th, 2021 at 3:18 PM ^

History will decide how Bo is judged.

But history will also judge how WE respond to this moment. 

Are we the kind of people who apologize for this BS. Or are we the kind of people who recognize the horrible actions he knew about and ignored, recognize that he isn't a hero, and recognize that we have to show - however late and however symbolically - that we cannot support him.

I think our choice is clear: we cannot let ourselves value football victories over the wellbeing of all the people who were harmed by a predator and ignored by the man responsible for them. Bo failed them. He failed the university. And he failed all Michigan fans who believed in him.

Fuck him. His name cannot be on a building. His statue cannot be on our campus. He knew, and he let it continue. WE cannot hesitate.

East Quad

May 12th, 2021 at 4:23 PM ^

I attended UM from '73 to '77.  I received care from UHS my senior year when I contracted mononucleosis two weeks before finals.  I am glad that Anderson did not treat me.  I am sorry that he was allowed to mistreat so many for so many years.

Mercury

May 12th, 2021 at 4:37 PM ^

Wasn't there at least one current long-time employee in the AD, who was made aware a long time ago and is still employed there?

 

Great job Ace.

LDNfan

May 13th, 2021 at 2:35 AM ^

Him doing you a favour once is not "to his credit ". He did it because he knew and apparently liked you so protected you while knowingly letting countless others suffer over and over again. 

A big part of this and other institutional abuse failures is just how many knew or suspected but did nothing. 

 

Wallaby Court

May 12th, 2021 at 4:41 PM ^

I read the core of the report yesterday afternoon. Three themes struck me. First, the victim reports of Dr. Anderson's abuse all carried an air of resignation or acquiescence. I do not mean that his victims tolerated or accepted his abuse, but that many seemed to treat it as an unavoidable consequence. Dr. Anderson had positioned himself as a gatekeeper. His victims shared an understanding that complaining about Dr. Anderson's abuse would not change anything. No one was going to investigate or do anything. The only way forward was through Dr. Anderson's exam room.

Second, coaches and administrators all seemed to tolerate or accept Dr. Anderson's activities. No one appears to have known the full extent, but lots of people, including Bo, had a pretty good idea that he was using his position to abuse students. Despite that, they all treated Dr. Anderson as inevitable. He was team doctor and everyone had to see the doctor. As far they were concerned, there was just nothing to be done about what was happening in that exam room. Those coaches and administrators also acted like turning a blind eye to Dr. Anderson's abuse was just an unavoidable cost of doing business. 

Finally, I think Dr. Anderson partially succeeded in hiding his abuse for so long because so many people insisted on maintaining a façade of masculinity. Coaches did not treat the reports with the seriousness they deserved because student athletes were supposed to be strong and tough and would never tolerate sexual abuse. That culture trickled down to student athletes, who buried their abuse behind jokes about "Handy Andy".

E: I did not write this as an apologetic for Michigan or Bo. They fostered a culture that let Dr. Anderson abuse students with near impunity, learned about his abuse, and did nothing.

Wallaby Court

May 12th, 2021 at 4:51 PM ^

Unquestionably. My--perhaps poorly explained--point was not that Dr. Anderson used his leverage to abuse people, but that his serial abuse sounded like open secret on campus. Dr. Nassar and Sandusky primarily operated in the shadows and preyed on victims that were too young to recognize or report what was happening. But here, everybody knew that you if had to go to see Dr. Anderson, he was going abuse you. Nobody thought they could do anything about it.

Wallaby Court

May 12th, 2021 at 5:06 PM ^

Agreed. Coaches and administrators at both Michigan State and Penn State knew that Dr. Nassar and Sandusky were using their positions to access and abuse children. I was trying to make a tragic point about the prospective knowledge of Dr. Anderson's victims. In many cases, it seemed like they walked into his exam room knowing what might happen, but with no other choice and no way to seek recourse. Michigan, as an institution, had effectively constructed a shield of willing ignorance that allowed Dr. Anderson to act with impunity. That is reprehensible.

RockinLoud

May 12th, 2021 at 5:12 PM ^

But here, everybody knew that you if had to go to see Dr. Anderson, he was going abuse you. Nobody thought they could do anything about it.

If that's the case, which it seems like it was, this is beyond fucked up. That the place where arrogance and superiority abound - one facet of which is ethics & morals - would allow something like this to go on for decades and NO ONE did, or felt that they could do, anything about it is so utterly tragic and reprehensible that I honestly have no words for it. I am sick to my stomach thinking about the situation. 

If the AD and administration do not do the right thing here then the things that supposedly make the University of Michigan what it is are nothing more than a grand facade; lies that we all tell ourselves to feel good about ourselves. Hell, maybe it was the whole time, but I hope not. Platitudes and philosophical ideas are great and all, but in the end those things are irrelevant if there is no action.

oriental andrew

May 12th, 2021 at 5:29 PM ^

I mentioned this in the board thread, but part of it is a product of the times, although that excuse gets more and more difficult to accept as time goes on into the 90s and early aughts. 

But the fact is that sexual abuse - whether by a doctor or priest or family member or friend - was just not talked about, acknowledged, or even really KNOWN to a lot of people back then. If you had asked me as a HS student in the early 90s about sexual abuse, I don't know that I'd have a good answer for you other than child molester or rapist. Doctors and priests and executives and close friends just don't fit the perception of the societal outcast and deviant who would be capable of such things. I think we, as a society, know better now - but even so, it was difficult for people abused by Larry Nassar in the last decade to come forward. There is a stigma attached to this now, and probably even moreso back then.

And one need only look at the opening story of this post to recognize that many (most?) victims didn't even realize they were victims. They were traumatized, but clearly lacked a cognizance of the meaning of those circumstances. 

It's just tragic and horrifying all the way around. Hopefully, we have grown as a society and the University will do the right thing here. Of that, I'm actually quite optimistic and hopeful. I strongly believe that there is no way that it will be the shitshow that was msu's response to Nassar, or even PSU's tepid response. 

VikingDiet

May 12th, 2021 at 7:48 PM ^

I think you're on point here, victims didn't classify themselves as such, but very much were. One of the victims told me about the abuse years ago and basically admitted as much- he knew it was wrong, but it was so widespread you were far more likely to be ostracized for bringing attention to it than just trying to move past it. Victims of a horrid monster and a culture that was completely inept at dealing with the situation. The University, and head coach, should have at least canned the guy for being a weirdo. That much would have been accepted then and they fell short of even that low bar.

 

 

jsquigg

May 12th, 2021 at 10:14 PM ^

Student athletes had less power to advocate for themselves and this also exposes hierarchical power structures. Today that shit can go public immediately via social media. Coaches have too much power today, but then they were able to keep everything in house. Pissing off a coach in any way gets your playing career ruined. Meanwhile today people piss and moan about transfers and players who lack discipline and loyalty because they actually have access to more and better options. We societally are culpable because we have glamorized a "win at any cost" morality and we have made legend the gritty ways coaches used to do things. Quite sad, really.

Hail to the Vi…

May 12th, 2021 at 5:51 PM ^

It really is a tragedy that this type of behavior was tolerated by previous generations, to the point that it was normalized and even joked about.

Say what you want about the new "woke culture", I don't want to devolve this comment into anything overly politicized. I think what virtually all of us agree upon is that sexual misconduct simply cannot be tolerated in our communities. The physical and mental pain caused to the victims have been documented all to well. 

I have to agree with Ace, and it's unfortunate, but I don't think the University can glorify or immortalize Schembechler knowing what he knew about Anderson while also standing for human rights and decency. 

I'm sure it will be extremely disappointing for the Schembechler estate, and I can understand that. I can even understand that maybe Bo didn't realize the gravity of dereliction of duty on his part to not intervene, given the societal norms of indifference in those times. But still, knowing what is known now, he can't continue to be immortalized by the University. 

Trebor

May 12th, 2021 at 4:44 PM ^

It's things like this that make me really disinterested in following sports anymore. People in charge want to win so badly, or make money so badly, that they'll ignore or downplay serious moral and legal transgressions. Just in our own conference over the last 10 years, we've had no shortage of scandals come to light - Michigan, OSU, and MSU ignoring abuse by doctors, PSU and Iowa ignoring abuse by coaches.

Once, just one goddamn time, it would be nice to see a school put the health and safety of students, athletes, and children ahead of monetary gain or notches in the win column.

Mgoscottie

May 12th, 2021 at 4:57 PM ^

This one doesn't strike me as a sports thing. I view this as people accepting sexual abuse and assault without any good reason at all. Preservation of the status of the doctor based on his identity seems a more likely culprit. Do people think firing (or reporting) a sports doctor would have been scandalous?

oriental andrew

May 12th, 2021 at 5:34 PM ^

I view this as people in position of leadership not understanding the gravity of the situation and downplaying it in the form of kids being naive about medical exams and silly locker-room talk about a doctor who is a leader and has a good reputation.

Doesn't make it right in any way, but there needs to be understanding to get to healing. 

That said, scrub the memorials to Schembechler and Canham and whoever else was involved. They clearly failed, and monumentally so. Ignorance isn't an excuse. 

kehnonymous

May 12th, 2021 at 5:28 PM ^

It’s not so much of a sports thing as it is a power thing. A lot of the focus has been on abuses in the church and that’s not misplaced, but the need to cover up sins to maintain the façade of your institution’s respectability and prestige is the one constant that cuts across politics, belief, and nationality.

dragonchild

May 12th, 2021 at 4:47 PM ^

And don’t anyone here dare hand out that “times were different back then” crap. They knew it was wrong then.

P.S. I guess Bo was too dumb to do his job?

Z_Wolverista

May 12th, 2021 at 10:35 PM ^

Logged in to upvote.

All kinds of things can be said to back this up-- the "not just (or even primarily) a stranger jumping out of the bushes" thing was well established by then, at least on campus, at least in a way that Bo could not have helped but known, but--

the plain-spoken fact of the matter couldn't be better said.

crg

May 13th, 2021 at 6:33 AM ^

...

I was trying to make a detailed point about the lack of context to your argument, but...

The text editor for this site seems to randomly decide to delete entire paragraphs from my post when I hit the delete (the previous character) key.  Makes it very frustrating to try and write anything of length.

Is anyone else seeing this?

Maybe I'll come back later to pick up the conversation, but I've had enough of this site for now.

crg

May 13th, 2021 at 12:52 PM ^

You seem way too emotional right now.  Maybe you should step back for a bit and calm down.

I will gladly have a rational discussion about this issue (or any other relating to UM and UM sports) - but I always ask for, and promote, dignity & decorum.  This was one of the best aspects I found while on campus (at least in my day) - people would be willing discuss anything and it would not be reduced to shouting matches and personal attacks.

maquih

May 13th, 2021 at 7:05 PM ^

Can't really be too emotional about finding out that bo fucking schembechler condoned sexual abuse of his own players!  it's really fucking emotional and tragic, and completely normal for us human beings to respond in such a manner!

1989 UM GRAD

May 12th, 2021 at 4:52 PM ^

Thanks for this, Ace.

I've never been one to put any mere mortal on a pedestal...but Bo has always had an aura of being the type of person who always did the right thing...no matter how difficult doing the right thing could be.

This could've been stopped...if only someone had listened...had cut out the "man up" bullshit...or had done the right thing.

A dark time for Michigan.  I hope that the current decision-makers do the right thing...per Ace's suggestions.