Yuma Sun

Former CDC director Frieden is accused of groping woman

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NEW YORK — One of the nation’s most respected medical experts, who led the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, entered a courtroom on Friday in handcuffs, arrested on sexual-harassment charges after a woman accused him of grabbing her behind late one night last year.

Dr. Thomas Frieden, who for years informed the public about dangers to their health, sat stone-faced as a judge warned him not to approach the woman, who accused him of groping her on Oct. 20, 2017, in his Brooklyn home.

He was arrested earlier Friday on three charges: forcible touching, sex abuse and harassment. His attorney, Laura Brevetti, entered a not guilty plea on his behalf.

Frieden, who also is a former New York City health commission­er, did not enter a plea.

The 55-year-old accuser, who knew Frieden, reported the encounter in July, and he was taken into custody after an investigat­ion.

The judge ordered Frieden to refrain from any contact with the woman and to surrender his U.S. passport. Frieden was freed on his own recognizan­ce, leaving in a car with his attorney. His next court appearance is Oct. 11.

Frieden leads a health initiative called Resolve to Save Lives, which is housed by nonprofit global health organizati­on Vital Strategies.

“The allegation does not reflect Dr. Frieden’s public or private behavior or his values over a lifetime of service to improve health around the world,” said a statement issued by a spokesman on his behalf.

The president of Vital Strategies, Jose L. Castro, came out in support of Frieden. He said Frieden informed him in April that “a non-work-related friend of his and his family of more than 30 years accused him of inappropri­ate physical contact.”

“I have known and worked closely with Dr. Frieden for nearly 30 years and have seen first-hand that he has the highest ethical standards both personally and profession­ally,” Castro said in a statement. “In all of my experience­s with him, there have never been any concerns or reports of inappropri­ate conduct.”

Nonetheles­s, earlier this month Vital Strategies hired an investigat­or to interview Resolve to Save Lives employees even though the woman didn’t work there. Castro said the investigat­ion found no inappropri­ate workplace behavior.

“Vital Strategies greatly values the work Dr. Frieden does to advance public health and he has my full confidence,” Castro said.

Frieden was a disease investigat­or at the Atlantabas­ed CDC, the nation’s top public health agency, in 1990 when he was assigned to New York City and worked on a large outbreak of drug-resistant tuberculos­is. He stayed, taking a job heading the city’s tuberculos­is control.

In 1996, he began working in India with the World Health Organizati­on on tuberculos­is control.

Frieden became New York City’s health commission­er in 2002 and was known for his aggressive measures to attack chronic diseases. In 2003, New York banned smoking in almost all workplaces, a precedents­etting move that inspired other cities to do the same. In 2006, it became the first U.S. city to ban restaurant­s from using artificial trans fats and required hundreds of eateries to post calorie counts on their menus.

In 2009, President Barack Obama’s administra­tion picked Frieden to head the CDC. Frieden led U.S. public health efforts during a range of high-profile national and internatio­nal health crises, including pandemic flu, Ebola and Zika.

Frieden was CDC director until January 2017, when he resigned as part of the turnover to President Donald Trump’s administra­tion.

In September 2017, Frieden announced he had moved back to New York City to head the $225 million Resolve to Save Lives initiative.

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 ?? REUTERS PHOTO/LUCAS JACKSON, REUTERS POOL ?? THOMAS FRIEDEN IS SEEN DURING his arraignmen­t in Brooklyn criminal court Friday in New York. Frieden, the former director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been arrested in New York on a sex abuse charge.
REUTERS PHOTO/LUCAS JACKSON, REUTERS POOL THOMAS FRIEDEN IS SEEN DURING his arraignmen­t in Brooklyn criminal court Friday in New York. Frieden, the former director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been arrested in New York on a sex abuse charge.

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