Texas
Court documents detail victims’ allegations of grooming, sexual abuse by North Texas figure skating coach
As a North Texas figure skating coach sits in the Collin County Jail charged with sexually assaulting two skaters, more details about his alleged behavior have come to light.
Court documents obtained by CBS News Texas on Wednesday outline some of the specific allegations against Benjamin Shroats, which Allen Police Department detectives learned from the victims themselves.
One of the victims was 16 when Shroats allegedly abused her. She told police that Shroats groped her chest in May or June of 2020 at a skating facility. She also told police that Shroats groped her crotch on three or four occasions and would make sexually suggestive comments towards her.
The other victim said she was sexually assaulted by Shroats when she was 18 and 19. She told police that the abuse occurred between December 2024 and September 2025, after knowing Shroats throughout her childhood and adolescence. Shroats would allegedly touch her buttocks during workouts and pressure her into meeting him alone. She also said that Shroats would instruct her to park her car on the top floor of a parking garage for sexual acts. The victim described Shroats’ warning that both of their lives would be ruined if she reported him.
Police said Shroats’ behavior with the older victim was “consistent with grooming by cultivating a long-term relationship of trust and authority” and gradually introducing sexually suggestive comments before escalating into inappropriate physical, and ultimately sexual, contact.
The documents show that when detectives interviewed Shroats before his arrest, he admitted to having a sexual relationship with the older victim. When presented with claims made by the victim, who was a minor, Shroats admitted to touching the victim’s buttocks on several occasions and that he may have accidentally touched her breast “during what he described as horseplay.” Detectives said that Shroats also claimed that the contact happened when the victim was an adult, and that he denied groping her groin.
Attorneys for victims, Shroats on the allegations
Zeke Fortenberry, an attorney representing the victims in a civil case, spoke with CBS News Texas on Tuesday. Fortenberry explained how the victims were especially vulnerable. “He was a specialty coach that helped them do lifts, acrobatics, and jumps, so these girls spent countless hours with him every week, multiple times a week,” Fortenberry said.
After Shoats’ arrest, Fortenberry said his clients’ first reaction was relief. “They have been holding this in for so long. One of their biggest fears in coming forward was that no one would believe them, and so the swift work of the Allen Police Department to have a report on Feb. 15 and arrest on Feb. 17 is outstanding, and I think it’s a testament to both police the police department’s strong evidence against him,” he said.
Shroats has not publicly commented on the allegations, but his attorney has released a statement which says in part, “Mr. Shroats unequivocally denies the allegations against him. As you are aware, criminal charges are accusations and not findings of guilt. The details of this case will be addressed in a courtroom, where evidence is evaluated under the law rather than in the court of public opinion.”
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Texas
Texas reports 48 cyclospora cases and the source is still unknown
Texas has reported 48 cases of Cyclospora, a foodborne illness caused by a parasite that health experts say can lead to severe gastrointestinal symptoms.
Dr. David Winter, an internal medicine physician with Baylor Scott & White, said cyclospora infections typically increase during the summer. However, he said the current increase affecting several states could become the worst in years.
At least 20 people nationwide have been hospitalized with symptoms that can last for weeks.
“It’s really bad disease right now and sometimes you get in your intestines and that gives you these horrible cramps and gurgling and then diarrhea. In fact, the diarrhea is so bad, they call it explosive diarrhea,” Winter said.
Cyclospora is caused by a parasite rather than a virus or bacteria. Winter said the parasite multiplies inside the intestines, contributing to recurring symptoms.
“It’s a parasite. It’s not a virus, it is not bacteria. So the parasite, once it gets in your intestine, it starts to multiply. And then when it builds up a certain amount, then it comes out with this explosion, and then it starts multiply again,” Winter said.
The illness spreads through food or water contaminated with infected feces and is rarely transmitted from person to person.
The source of the current outbreak is unknown. Previous outbreaks have been linked to fresh fruits and vegetables, including basil, cilantro, raspberries and snow peas.
Doctors recommend thoroughly washing fresh produce before eating it to help reduce the risk of infection.
For many people, symptoms can be managed at home, and antibiotics are also effective, according to Winter.
He said patients with severe diarrhea should let their doctor know about their symptoms because many routine stool tests do not automatically screen for cyclospora.
“Most stool tests in laboratories don’t look for this. So you want to be sure and tell your doctor, I’ve got this, quote, explosive diarrhea. I’m cramping, I feel like hell, I have all this fatigue,” Winter said.
While the infection is uncommon, Winter said it can be especially difficult for those who become sick.
“It’s rare, but boy when you get it, it is tough,” Winter said.
This story was originally reported for broadcast by NBC DFW. AI tools helped convert the story into a digital article, and an NBC DFW journalist edited it again before publication.
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