Opera star David Daniels pleads guilty to sexual assault
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Opera star David Daniels pleads guilty to sexual assault
Countertenor David Daniels, left, and his husband Scott Walters at the Harris County Courthouse in Houston, Aug 4, 2023. The opera star, one of the world’s leading countertenors, and his husband pleaded guilty on Friday, Aug. 4, 2023, in Houston to sexually assaulting a young singer who had attended one of Daniels’ performances there in 2010. (Michael Stravato/The New York Times)

by Dianna Wray and Javier C. Hernández



NEW YORK, NY.- Opera star David Daniels, one of the world’s leading countertenors, pleaded guilty Friday in Houston to sexually assaulting a young singer who had attended one of his performances there in 2010.

The plea deal was announced just as the trial of Daniels, 57, and his husband, Scott Walters, 40, was about to begin.

Daniels pleaded guilty to a charge of sexual assault of an adult, a second-degree felony. He will face eight years of probation, a lifetime requirement to register as a sex offender and an order that he refrain from contact with the singer he assaulted, Samuel Schultz. He avoided a more serious charge of aggravated sexual assault, a first-degree felony, which carries harsher penalties. Walters, who was facing the same charges, pleaded guilty under similar terms.

The case will be transferred to Georgia, where the couple live.

The jury was assembled in Harris County District Court in Houston on Friday morning, and all signs indicated that the trial would soon begin, when Matt Hennessy, a lawyer representing Daniels and Walters, told Judge Reagan Clark that there was a new offer that he needed to discuss with his clients.

An agreement was reached, and a little over an hour later the defendants were back in the courtroom.

Daniels initially attempted to plead no contest, but Clark refused.

“It’s guilty or not guilty in my courtroom,” the judge said. “If you’re going to plead no contest, then we are going to start hearing evidence.”




Daniels, who wore a blue suit, said, “Guilty, your honor.”

Soon after that, Daniels exited the courtroom with Walters and moved briskly down the hall, saying he had no comment. Hennessy also declined to comment.

Daniels, who appeared on some of the world’s leading stages, including the Metropolitan Opera in New York and the Royal Opera in London, is one of the most prominent classical stars to face criminal charges during the national #MeToo reckoning. His performing career has suffered since his arrest in 2019, and he was fired from his position as a tenured professor of voice at the University of Michigan in 2020.

After Daniels and Walters pleaded guilty, Schultz read a victim impact statement before the court, although the news media was barred from hearing it. In a statement to The New York Times on Friday morning, he said he was pleased by the outcome.

“I am glad that the defendants have acknowledged by their guilty pleas the truth of my traumatic experience, and that this portion of my nightmarish ordeal has finally concluded,” he said.

Schultz, a baritone who is now 36, was a 23-year-old graduate student at Rice University in Houston at the time of the encounter with Daniels. He went public with an accusation of rape in 2018 amid the #MeToo movement — first anonymously, in an online post, and then naming Daniels and Walters as his attackers in an interview with The New York Daily News.

Schultz had accused the two men of assaulting him in May 2010 after he went to hear Daniels in Handel’s “Xerxes” at Houston Grand Opera. Schultz said he was introduced to Daniels and Walters by a friend. After attending the performance and cast party, Schultz has said he was invited to Daniels and Walters’s apartment. There, he said, he was given a drink that caused him to lose consciousness. He has said that he awoke alone, naked and bleeding from the rectum.

Daniels and Walters were arrested and charged with sexual assault in connection to the incident. They had previously denied the accusations, saying they had consensual sex with Schultz.

Daniels rose to fame as a countertenor, singing high parts that were once sung by castratos or mezzo-sopranos. His success helped open doors for other countertenors.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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