Third allegation surfaces against Chadima

MADISON, Wis. (AP) -- Authorities have widened the investigation into a former Wisconsin athletic official John Chadima after a third adult male came forward with allegations of sexual impropriety.
Campus police have deemed the third allegation "credible," chancellor David Ward said Thursday. His statement did not describe the nature of the allegations, and a campus spokesman, citing the ongoing investigation, declined to comment further.
Chadima was placed on administrative leave from his position as associate athletic director on Jan. 6 and resigned the same day. He apologized for what he called "a lapse in judgment" and said alcohol has controlled his life for the last few months.
"I will take full responsibility for my lack of judgment and actions that evening," he said at the time.
A telephone call to a listing for Chadima rang unanswered Thursday. A message left with his attorney, Charles Giesen, was not immediately returned.
Ward urged anyone who may have been a victim or who has information about inappropriate conduct by Chadima to come forward. Those individuals can contact university police or Patrick Fiedler, a former Dane County judge who has been asked to head an internal investigation.
Online court records do not show that Chadima faces any criminal charges. A message left with the Dane County district attorney was not immediately returned.
The previous two adult men who came forward said they didn't want to press charges. Vince Sweeney, vice chancellor of university relations, said he wasn't immediately aware whether the third person wanted Chadima to be charged.
Wisconsin officials have said that the Penn State scandal that came to light last fall prompted them to review protocols for reporting sexual assaults. Former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky is accused of sexually assaulting young boys for years.
Chadima resigned after he was accused of sexually assaulting a male student at a Rose Bowl party.
Fiedler's report on that incident, released last month, said Chadima threw a party in his Los Angeles hotel room for university staff and student employees on Dec. 30, three days before the Badgers played in nearby Pasadena.
The report said Chadima asked a male student employee to stay and have a drink with him. Chadima allegedly reached inside the student's pants and touched his genitals, and when the student slapped his hand away Chadima warned him, "I could have you fired," the report said.
Chadima attempted to gloss over the incident as "just joking around," according to the report.
State Rep. Stephen Nass, a Whitewater Republican who chairs the Assembly's higher education committee, has called on the university to investigate Chadima's entire tenure at the school and to review the athletic department's management.