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ORU campus relieved about lawsuit settlement
 
By SHANNON MUCHMORE World Staff Writer
Published: 10/24/2008  2:14 AM
Last Modified: 10/24/2008  2:19 AM


View all the stories, documents, videos and slide shows about the ORU lawsuit: tulsaworld.com/orulawsuit


The atmosphere on the campus of Oral Roberts University was a bit more relaxed Thursday, with news that the university had settled a lawsuit with two former professors.

"Everyone's just breathing easier, that's for sure," said Ken Weed, ORU chemistry professor. "We're glad it's behind us."

A settlement in the lawsuit was announced late Wednesday. The suit, filed a year ago this month, alleged wrongful termination and fraud, and accused then-President Richard Roberts of misspending university money on his family's home and lifestyle.

Attorneys for the all parties said the settlement terms are confidential. Lawyers for the Brookers sent a letter in August asking for $2.5 million, but ORU turned down the offer.

Wednesday's settlement was reached in court-ordered mediation after an earlier attempt resulted in professor John Swails settling his part of the suit and returning to work at ORU.

Mart Green, chairman of ORU's new board of trustees, issued a statement Thursday praising the agreement.

"The university is happy to have this difficult chapter in our history closed," he said. "Resolution allows us to continue to grow the mission and celebrate the many positive blessings we have all received this year."

Weed said he and those he spoke with Thursday are glad to be moving on from the contentious lawsuit. He did not speak to any students, but said they seemed to have moved on from the tense climate of the past year.

Matthew McAfee, an international relations freshman, said students on campus had not been talking about the lawsuit recently.

"They know that it happened, they just don't want to talk about it," he said. "It's not at the forefront of their minds."

Broadcast journalism senior Kerrick Butler, who heads up a group of student representatives, agreed that most students are trying to put the controversy behind them.

"I think they're happy the whole saga is finally over," Butler said. "They're ready to start writing the next chapter."

After the professors, Tim and Paulita Brooker, filed the lawsuit, ORU was hit by one controversy after another.

Richard Roberts received a vote of no confidence from the faculty and resigned in November. The university also revealed it was about $55 million in debt.

More lawsuits followed, regents resigned and ORU found itself plunged into scandal.

Some feared the university itself was crumbling. But Green, a Yukon businessman, and his family donated $70 million to save the university.

Green, whose family founded Hobby Lobby and the Mardel Christian stores chains, made most of the donation contingent on ORU accepting shared governance policies and embracing financial transparency.

ORU accepted the donation and dumped its board of regents for a board of trustees, of which Green is chairman. The university debt has been reduced to about $19 million, and a presidential search is scheduled to be completed this summer.

One of the lawsuits still pending is from a former accountant who claimed he was threatened with losing his job unless he agreed to false and illegal accounting practices.

His lawsuit alleges the Robertses funneled more than $1 billion annually through an unmarked, miscellaneous account. The money, some of which was intended as a donation to student financial aid, was alleged to have gone to ORU regents.

A former student has also sued, saying he was not able to complete his degree.

A district judge appeared close to dismissing both cases last month, but allowed attorneys more time to plead the cases.




Shannon Muchmore 581-8378
shannon.muchmore@tulsaworld.com
By SHANNON MUCHMORE World Staff Writer

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Report Comment
Graychin, Eucha (10/24/2008 9:38:44 AM)
With benefit of hindsight, did the lawsuit help or hurt ORU?
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Mar, Tulsa (10/24/2008 10:07:07 AM)
Probably hurt their fundraising efforts, but helped clean house. So long Richard and Lindsey, join daddy Oral out in CA.
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TulGal, Tulsa (10/24/2008 12:05:05 PM)
Graychin, from all that happed I think the Swails' and Brooker's lawsuits saved ORU. There are those who hoped at least one of these cases would go to trial so that people would have to testify, under oath. Others thought it would be best to settle, so this mess wouldn't drag on and hurt the school even more. You've posted comments about this story just about from day one. Do you remember that the majority of TW comment posters predicted what has just happened--things would be settled out of court?

I wonder what happened to $50 Fine, Machiavelli, the 2 Gails, Deborah, Carl Robbins and all the others who spent hours on these boards. That is a story in itself!

Report Comment
Graychin, Eucha (10/24/2008 12:32:19 PM)
TulGal:

You might be interested in my exchange of views with Anne M. Greene in the comments to yesterday's TW story "Settlement reached in ORU suit."
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Anne M. Green, Tulsa (10/24/2008 12:59:06 PM)
Graychin - I absolutely believe it helped ORU. As ugly and contentious as it was, it was the catalyst for new leadership, renewed vision, financial accountability, and future growth. Kind of like aggressive pruning.

In my opinion, the students have acted with great maturity here. Most elected to focus on their responsibilities as students, giving support to the new administrative changes, but never letting the well-publicized controversy overshadow their purpose. They would never have chosen this mess for their school, but have overcome it. Big props to them.

I can't help but also give a "shout out" to Mart Green here. Can you imagine the decision he and his family had to make to get involved? That was one serious step of faith. And then after stepping up to the plate and donating $70 million, they discovered the mess was "bigger and badder" than on the surface. I'm glad he was a visionary could see beyond the gloom and doom.

The debt, now whittled down to $19 million, and a new Presidential search, give me great hope that the university can move forward with unprecedented results.


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pgcfriend, (10/24/2008 2:29:20 PM)
As an alumni I am glad all of this came out as ugly as it was. Many of us are really excited about the future of ORU. I just got an alumni card a week or two ago. It is exciting to see the improvements on campus. The LRC (library) is getting new carpet and other things. The atmosphere on campus is definitely better than when I was there two years ago. I'm glad to see a businessman that seems to walk in integrity take over the school. I was excited to see a change in leadership. It appears that it has been a wonderful thing. One of my friends owns a business here. He has a regular customer that stated that not long after the change that the employees got raises. The person also mentioned that the fear of giving input is gone. I participated with one of the choirs on campus. We are planning a reunion this coming year during Homecoming. I know for me it is a better reunion because of the changes made.
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Observer3, T.B.D. (10/24/2008 4:42:06 PM)
Now everyone at ORU, alumni, students, parents, etc. can bury their heads in the sand again and pretend it never happened.
 

 
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