CTE as Latent Disease – Will Other Courts Follow?
By: Callie Brister
Member, American Journal of Trial Advocacy
Background – Schmitz v. NCAA
In October of 2014, Steven Schmitz, a former running back and receiver at the University of Notre Dame, and his wife, Yvette Schmitz, filed a lawsuit against the University of Notre Dame (“Notre Dame”) and the National Collegiate Athletic Association (“NCAA”) alleging that they both “failed to notify, educate, and protect Schmitz from the long-term dangers of repeated concussive and subconcussive head impacts.”[1] Steven was a football player at Notre Dame in the mid-1970s.[2] During his career at Notre Dame, he sustained repeated “concussive and subconcussive impacts.”[3] Steven was diagnosed with a degenerative brain disease, chronic traumatic encephalopathy (“CTE”), in 2012.[4] By 2014, at the age of fifty-eight, Steven had also been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, severe memory loss, and cognitive decline.[5] Steven ultimately died in early 2015.[6] Continue reading “CTE as Latent Disease – Will Other Courts Follow?”



