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Utah OB-GYN David Broadbent charged with forcible sexual abuse for 2020 patient exam

More than 100 women have publicly accused the Utah County doctor of touching them inappropriately, but this is the first time he has faced a criminal charge.

(Leah Hogsten | The Salt Lake Tribune) The University Medical Center office building, Feb. 7, 2023, located on University Avenue in Provo where OB-GYN Dr. David Broadbent once practiced.

Utah OB-GYN David Broadbent was charged Thursday with forcible sexual abuse, as prosecutors allege he sexually touched a patient during a 2020 exam.

Broadbent has been accused in civil lawsuits of inappropriately touching more than 100 patients during exams — but this is the first time Utah County prosecutors have filed a criminal charge against him. He faces a second-degree felony, which carries a potential penalty of up to 15 years in prison.

Deputy Utah County Attorney Tim Taylor, who is a spokesperson for the office, said Thursday that police and prosecutors are continuing to investigate and are still considering whether to file additional charges against the OB-GYN.

In charging records, prosecutors say one of Broadbent’s patients came to see him in 2020 regarding a bump in her vaginal area. Broadbent allegedly instructed the patient to undress from the waist down — but when he returned to the exam room after she changed, prosecutors say he lifted up her shirt and bra and touched her breasts. He then grabbed her leg “in what felt like a sexual manner,” prosecutors say, and began a vaginal examination.

An attorney representing Broadbent in his civil litigation did not immediately respond to a request for comment. No attorney is yet listed in his criminal case.

At least 49 women have reported to Provo Police that Broadbent sexually abused them during exams, and prosecutors have been weighing whether to file charges for 18 months. Earlier this month, the county attorney’s office received funding to pay for a nurse practitioner who specializes in sexual assault exams to review the evidence that prosecutors have, and to do research and advise them on what the “standard of care” is for an OB-GYN appointment.

Many of the women who reported to police allege Broadbent inappropriately touched their breasts, vaginas and rectums during exams — often without warning or explanation, and in ways that hurt them and made them feel violated. Other former patients, along with many of the women who went to police, have also sued Broadbent or the hospitals where he worked, with a total of nearly 120 women making sexual assault allegations in civil lawsuits.

Broadbent has agreed to stop practicing medicine while this criminal investigation is ongoing. As part of a separate civil case, Broadbent’s attorneys have said sexual assault allegations against him are “without merit.”

The woman whose report led to the criminal charge saw Broadbent in July 2020. A year and a half later, in December 2021, another former patient of Broadbent’s spoke out publicly on the podcast “Mormon Stories,” describing the painful way she said he had examined her years before and how it left her feeling traumatized.

After the podcast aired, women started coming forward publicly in civil lawsuits accusing Broadbent of inappropriate touching.

But in September 2022, a judge dismissed a case filed by 94 women when he ruled that it fell under medical malpractice law instead of a civil sexual assault claim, which meant it had faced — and missed — tighter filing deadlines. The women have appealed the ruling to the Utah Supreme Court, and have been waiting for seven months for its decision.