Editor's Note: Some sources have been granted anonymity in the interest of student safety. Interviewees are anonymous unless they otherwise gave consent to be named in the article.
Paul Corsaro, former IU Indianapolis men’s basketball coach, has filed a tort claim against IU Indianapolis for defamation. The university sent a termination statement to the IndyStar claiming that Corsaro's behavior did not align with university values and standards when it came to the treatment of student athletes.
Paul Corsaro was announced as the head coach of the men's basketball program on March 25, 2024. Before coming to IU Indianapolis, Corsaro served as head coach at the University of Indianapolis for four years, leading UIndy to two consecutive NCAA Division II Tournament appearances.
Corsaro began his coaching career as an assistant coach at UIndy (2012-18) before moving to Purdue Fort Wayne (2018-20), where he served as assistant head coach and recruitment coordinator. He graduated from UIndy in 2012 with a degree in communications and completed his Masters of Business Administration there in 2014.
On May 13, Corsaro was told of his for-cause termination by athletic director Luke Bosso, which was effective immediately. Corsaro claims that he was not told of his reason for his termination for-cause prior to the public statement released by the university.
“Last month, IU Indianapolis Athletics received allegations from six individuals who had played under coach Paul Corsaro at IU Indianapolis,” read the IndyStar article. “Based on the complaints, the IU office of vice president and general counsel conducted an investigation and concluded that Corsaro’s behavior did not meet the university’s values and standards regarding the treatment of student athletes. Based on these conclusions, IU Indianapolis has dismissed Paul Corsaro. The search for a new coach will begin immediately.”
One student at IU Indianapolis said, “Whenever you’re firing someone, it needs to be full transparency…you need to know about that stuff when it pertains to you.”
The termination came after a letter, written by six former basketball team players and their families, was sent to the university on April 15. The letter raised questions about misconduct from Corsaro's coaching, which resulted in an investigation done by the Office of the Vice President & General Counsel (OVPGC) who interviewed four of the six former players.
The investigation included the review of practice footage to compare the actions of Corsaro to the allegations made by the former players. Throughout the investigation, Corsaro claims that Bosso made statements that Corsaro would be keeping his position despite the investigation.
“They should have told him first,” said another student at IU Indianapolis. “That way he would have been aware of what was happening. I would have been upset.”
The tort claim notice claims that when the investigation was concluded on May 9, the only allegations deemed true was that Corsaro had used profanity during practice and bumped a player when demonstrating a basketball move.
The university declined to comment on the tort claim, as “IU does not comment on pending litigation."
Melanie Contreras is a sophomore majoring in journalism and the culture and politics editor for The Campus Citizen.
Citlali Sanchez is a senior majoring in sports journalism and the sports editor for The Campus Citizen.


