A long time after sufferers first warned Columbia College that certainly one of its medical doctors sexually abused them, some college directors have lastly confronted penalties.
On Tuesday, Columbia launched a long-awaited report that particulars a tradition of silence that allowed OB-GYN Robert Hadden to abuse greater than 1,000 sufferers throughout his practically 25-year profession at Columbia.
In unveiling the report, the college additionally introduced that two long-time directors are leaving their positions.
Dr. Mary D’Alton, chair of the OB-GYN division and Hadden’s former boss, has stepped down. D’Alton will keep her scientific observe.
Dr. Lee Goldman, the previous dean of the medical faculty, will retire. The 2 have been directors above Hadden. They have been additionally amongst these cc’d on a 2012 letter that permit Hadden proceed seeing sufferers even after he was arrested when one girl reported he’d assaulted her.
Yesterday’s report was prompted by a ProPublica investigation that exposed how Columbia had dismissed girls and in the end protected a predator. Amid outrage within the wake of the 2023 story, Columbia introduced it could arrange a $100 million fund for survivors and provoke an unbiased evaluation.
Greater than two years after the evaluation was introduced, the 156-page report was revealed days after the New York legal professional basic mentioned it was investigating Columbia’s response to the Hadden case.
The report outlines how greater than a dozen sufferers’ complaints had gone nowhere, partly due to the shortage of clear reporting procedures. The report additionally discovered a “hierarchal institutional tradition” wherein physicians occupied an “exalted” or “god-like” standing that made it tough for workers to report issues.
One affected person, Eva Santos Veloz, was 18 years previous when she noticed Hadden for an emergency supply in 2008. On the time, she and her mom reported that Hadden had touched her in ways in which made her uncomfortable, typically with out gloves. Nothing occurred after she filed the criticism. On the time, she mentioned, she got here to imagine she was making the entire thing up as a result of nobody appeared to imagine her.
Santos mentioned that whereas the report confirms that she was proper all alongside, it doesn’t inform her something new. “The one peace it provides me is that they’re publicly saying, ‘We knew about this and we did nothing,’” she mentioned.
The report additionally lists 5 completely different complaints that have been reported to management however resulted in no motion in opposition to Hadden. Investigators be aware that the college’s record-keeping practices have been inadequate and that higher-ups didn’t conduct a full investigation into his misconduct.

In an inner e-mail despatched Tuesday to the OB-GYN division and obtained by ProPublica, D’Alton introduced that she’s going to stay on the school “to proceed our division’s work of advancing girls’s well being.”
“I can not adequately categorical the sorrow that I really feel for the struggling Robert Hadden inflicted on his sufferers,” D’Alton wrote within the e-mail. “That these acts have been dedicated by a health care provider in our division, together with whereas I used to be chair, pains me deeply and all the time will.”
An analogous assertion posted to the Columbia web site doesn’t be aware her continued employment.
D’Alton didn’t reply to a request for remark.
In a press release, Goldman mentioned his “coronary heart breaks for the victims of Robert Hadden.”
He continued: “All through my tenure we targeted on prioritizing a tradition of ethics and affected person security on the medical faculty, and to reassess and improve its insurance policies and procedures on an ongoing foundation.”
The report additionally confirms that executives on the prime of the organizations — together with former Columbia President Lee Bollinger, in addition to one of many trustees at each Columbia and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, the Columbia-affiliated system the place Hadden was an attending doctor — had been alerted to Hadden’s arrest the night it occurred.
Bollinger, who retired from his submit in the summertime of 2023, didn’t reply to a request for remark.
A letter accompanying the report’s launch mentioned, “The College stays steadfast in our dedication to our ongoing duties. We should proceed to function with transparency and confront systemic failures once they happen.” Columbia didn’t present an extra remark.
In a press release, a gaggle of survivors, together with Marissa Hoechstetter and Evelyn Yang, criticized the report for failing to look at what occurred within the years after Hadden left Columbia — together with the college’s documented efforts to destroy proof, combat former sufferers in court docket and discredit these survivors.
The assertion additionally factors out that Claire Shipman, the present performing president of the college and who signed Tuesday’s announcement, has been on the board of trustees since 2013, amid the fallout from the Hadden case. She didn’t reply to a request for remark.
“What Columbia has launched in the present day presents the naked minimal accountability for failures that
ought to have been addressed years in the past,” the survivors’ assertion mentioned. “It confirms the systemic breakdown that allowed Hadden to function. Nevertheless it stops wanting analyzing the cover-up tradition that survivors skilled firsthand as soon as the abuse got here to gentle.”
The deadline to submit a declare for compensation to Columbia’s survivor fund, which was established for former sufferers who don’t need to file a lawsuit, was prolonged to June 15.

