Bettman apologizes to Beach, defends response in wake of sexual assault allegations
NHL commissioner Gary Bettman came under fire Monday as he defended the league’s response to last week’s release of a damning report into how the Chicago Blackhawks handled sexual assault allegations made by one of their prospects against an assistant coach during the team’s 2010 run to the Stanley Cup.
Bettman opened his remarks by apologizing to Kyle Beach, the player at the centre of the allegations against former video coach Brad Aldrich, before fielding a number of pointed questions related to punishments levied — and not levied — by his office, including the decision to absolve Winnipeg Jets general manager Kevin Cheveldayoff of wrongdoing.
An assistant GM with the Blackhawks at the time, Bettman told reporters during a 50-minute virtual media availability Cheveldayoff was “such a minor player” in the process and that he didn’t deserve sanctions more than a decade later.
The independent third-party report by an outside law firm, commissioned by the team in response to lawsuits by Beach and a former high school student Aldrich was convicted of assaulting in Michigan after leaving the NHL team, indicated senior Blackhawks’ leaders discussed Beach’s accusations at a meeting on May 23, 2010, after Chicago advanced to the Cup final.