COLLEGE STATION — A former team physician for Texas A&M athletics has been arrested on two charges of sexual assault.
Kory Gill, director of the Primary Care and Sports Medicine Fellowship Program at the Texas A&M Health Science Center prior to his February firing during investigations into the alleged sexual assaults, was arrested Wednesday and released after posting bond totaling $60,000.
An A&M official familiar with the details of the case said late Thursday that neither accuser was an A&M athlete or former A&M athlete, and that there is “zero indication” Gill ever sexually assaulted any A&M athletes, and that “there are always athletic trainers in the room when athletes are examined by a doctor.”
A second A&M official with knowledge of the complaint said one of the accusers was an A&M staff member who lodged a Title IX complaint with the university, and the other accuser did not appear to be associated with A&M.
Gill, 44, worked with A&M athletes through the health science center, a person familiar with his relationship with the school said.
The second accuser told police that in November 2021 Gill gave her a drink that made her “foggy” at his office at Central Texas Sports Medicine on College Station’s University Drive, and according to the statement, “the defendant then penetrated her vagina with his tongue, finger and penis.”
The accuser said Gill, a clinical assistant professor at A&M at the time, had been treating her for hip pain. The accuser told police Gill later apologized to her and said “they had too much to drink” while in his office for the treatment. Gill also told her he was “irresponsible and unprofessional,” according to the report.
The Houston Chronicle does not identify sexual assault accusers. The first accuser told police that in April 2021 Gill put his “fingers in her vagina for 15-20 seconds” during treatment for back pain, before she got up from the exam room table and told him she needed to check on her dog.
Both accusers said Gill, a doctor of osteopathic medicine, had been drinking alcohol during their visits.
A story from a little more than a decade ago on the Texas A&M Health Science Center website interviewed Gill about working with the 2011 A&M women’s basketball team during its run to the national title. The story was pulled from the website Thursday.
A birthday wish to Gill from A&M soccer coach G Guerrieri from a little more than three years ago called Gill “an @AggieSoccer MVP.”
A biography of Gill via the Texas Chapter of the American College of Sports Medicine said Gill is from Franklinton, La., and is married with two children.
An A&M spokesman said late Thursday that “Gill worked periodically at games and practices during the time he was at the health science center.” He started at the health science center in July 2009.