Los Angeles Chargers head coach Jim Harbaugh was added as a defendant in a federal lawsuit against the University of Michigan and former assistant football coach Matthew Weiss, who authorities say hacked into computers at more than 100 universities and stole the identity of more than 3,000 students.
In a lawsuit filed in the Eastern District of Michigan and obtained by USA TODAY Sports, the amended version is part of a lawsuit originally filed in March, in which 11 women filed a class action lawsuit saying Weiss downloaded personal, intimate digital photographs and videos of them.
Former University of Michigan president Santa Ono, athletic director Warde Manuel, and 47 others have been named in the amended lawsuit as defendants.
The lawsuit claims that Harbaugh, who at the time was Michigan’s coach, and others knew that Weiss had viewed private information on a computer, but still let him coach as a co-offensive coordinator in a national semifinal playoff game in the Fiesta Bowl against TCU on Dec. 31, 2022.
‘Had Harbaugh implemented basic oversight of his staff, plaintiffs and the class would have been protected against predators such as Weiss,’ the lawsuit states. ‘Instead, Weiss was a highly compensated asset that was promoted by and within the football program, from which position he was able to, and did, target female student athletes.’
Weiss was fired in January 2023 after an investigation by campus police looked into his computer use.
More than a dozen civil lawsuits have been filed against Weiss, who worked for the Baltimore Ravens before becoming Michigan’s quarterbacks coach and co-offensive coordinator.
