Over the next three years, Wright alleged, Strauss-Gordon touched him inappropriately during treatment sessions and performed oral sex on him in the training room. During his junior year, when Wright was 17, he had multiple sexual encounters with Strauss in the training room, locker room and weight room, he told ESPN. The lawsuit also says he had sex with Strauss during several weekly team dinners at coach Harold Strauss's home.
"You've got football, you've got the coach's daughter, you've got a permissive school environment where it's allowed to happen. I mean, you've got sort of a perfect storm of sexual abuse that could be covered up easily," attorney Morgan Stewart, who represents Wright and eight other plaintiffs, told ESPN.
Wright told ESPN that players and coaches openly joked about Strauss-Gordon's behavior and referred to oral sex as getting the "Tiffany treatment."
"You've got football, you've got the coach's daughter, you've got a permissive school environment where it's allowed to happen. I mean, you've got sort of a perfect storm of sexual abuse that could be covered up easily," attorney Morgan Stewart, who represents Wright and eight other plaintiffs, told ESPN.
Wright told ESPN that players and coaches openly joked about Strauss-Gordon's behavior and referred to oral sex as getting the "Tiffany treatment."
Daughter of HS football legend accused of sexual abuse as athletic trainer
A lawyer for the former players told a news station coaches joked about the trainer’s actions and dubbed it “Tiffany’s special treatment.”
nypost.com