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An attempt to dismiss and seal a massive sex abuse class action lawsuit against criminally convicted former urologist Darius Paduch— with nearly 300 male plaintiffs — has failed, a Manhattan
Supreme Court judge ruled Thursday. Judge Suzanne J. Adams ruled that the class action suit against the doctor and the medical institutions which employed him should move forward, and
demanded that Paduch finally produce a reply to the complaint later this summer. “I’m so grateful the judge took this seriously and came down the right way,” said lawyer for the nearly 300
victims, Anthony T. DiPietro. The class action suit has grown from 58 victims when it was initially filed in August 2023 to a staggering 278 former patients as of Thursday DiPietro has
previously won nearly $250 million in lawsuits related to former Columbia gynecologist Robert Hadden, and he says this case might be even larger in scale, noting that a number of new victims
had joined the suit just this week. EXPLORE MORE He exclusively told The Post that the civil suit is perhaps “our only opportunity to hold these institutions accountable for the role they
played in this massive cover up.” Lawyers for Paduch and the top hospitals where he worked for two decades — Weill Cornell Medicine, NewYork Presbyterian Hospital, Northwell Health and
Columbia University — attempted to use a precedent set by rulings in sexual abuse cases involving the Catholic Church to keep “scandalous” accusations from the public record, and to dismiss
the case entirely. Paduch’s abuse included making them masturbate in front of him or masturbating them himself — sometimes insisting they get on all fours so he could “stimulate” or “milk”
their prostate gland, the filing claims. DiPietro estimates that roughly 20 percent of the nearly 300 former patients who are part of the class action were victimized as minors, he told The
Post. Paduch also “performed unnecessary surgical procedures on patients, often without any anesthesia, in an effort to inflict pain [on] the patients,” the suit claims. Then he “dispensed
copious opioid medication in an effort to get his patients addicted so that he could better manipulate, control, exploit and abuse them — all without any basis in actual medical standards of
care,” the filing alleges. DiPietro said that the sexual criminals of the medical world, like Paduch, Hadden and former USA gymnastics coach and convicted rapist Larry Nassar “are actually
not the problem.” “They’re a symptom. The problem [is] these institutions that cover this up, gaslight and lie to patients and keep exposing more unsuspecting patients to a known serial
sexual predator,” he said. Paduch was criminally convicted by a federal jury in May on 13 counts related to the sexual abuse of eight patients. The disgraced doctor also faces a slew of
litigation from dozens of other victims in unrelated sexual abuse suits, including a former intern who said he was just 16-years-old at the time of his abuse. A spokesperson for Weill
Cornell said that they are “heartbroken for these survivors” and that the institution has “implemented enhancements to our policies and training requirements, and launched new patient
safety programs, to minimize the risk of such abhorrent conduct occurring in the future.” Lawyers representing Paduch, NewYork Presbyterian, Columbia and Northwell Health did not immediately
reply to a request for comment.