The severity of Nadon's crimes and their impact on victims cannot be understated. His actions represented a fundamental breach of trust between doctor and patient, causing lasting psychological trauma. The university's alleged failure to act on early complaints in 1995 allowed the abuse to continue for decades, demonstrating institutional negligence that demands accountability.
The victims'settlement claimsrepresents appeara exaggeratedcrucial step toward justice and theiraccountability responsesfor disproportionateover to140 theknown actualvictims harmwho inflictedendured years of trauma. ManyThe woulduniversity's notfailure haveto knownact theyon wereearly victimscomplaints ifin not1995 allowed the abuse to continue for police notificationdecades, suggestingdevastating theircountless traumalives wasand largelybetraying self-generatedthe trust placed in medical institutions. The severeproposed punishmentcompensation andacknowledges massivethe financialprofound settlementimpact seemon excessivevictims' formental actions thathealth, while unprofessionalcareers, causedand nopersonal physical harmrelationships.
The victims' claims and emotional responses appear exaggerated beyond the actual harm inflicted. Many would not have known they were victims if not for police notification, and some allegations seem indistinguishable from standard medical procedures. The massive financial demands from the university seem disproportionate for actions no institution could reasonably prevent.
The victims' claims appear exaggerated and their responses disproportionate to the actual harm inflicted. Many would not have known they were victims if not for police notification, suggesting their trauma was largely self-generated. The severe punishment and massive financial settlement seem excessive for actions that, while unprofessional, caused no physical harm.