BERKELEY, Calif. -- A University of California, Berkeley assistant basketball coach resigned Thursday after sexual harassment allegations from a reporter and dropped his appeal of the school's attempt to fire him.
Yann Hufnagel's resignation came a day before the results of the review were to be released and amid an outcry over the university's handling of sexual harassment claims against high-profile officials.
Those circumstances led Hufnagel to decide it was best to drop the issue.
"The toxic environment at UC Berkeley has made it impossible for Mr. Hufnagel to rejoin the basketball team he loves, even if he is vindicated in full, as the facts would show," his attorney, Mary McNamara, said in a statement. "He needs to look out for the student-athletes he coached, as well as his own future."
The school gave Hufnagel a termination notice last month, just before the Cal Bears team was about to enter the NCAA tournament after a relatively successful season.
The university had launched the inquiry into Hufnagel last year, after the female journalist covering the team sent head Coach Cuonzo Martin a long email describing in graphic detail unwelcome advances from the assistant.
The allegations against Hufnagel were among many recent, high-profile sexual harassment cases at UC Berkeley that have raised questions about top officials' handling of them. Other cases involved a renowned astronomy professor, a vice chancellor and the law school dean.
Officials are conducting a review of whether Martin handled the situation correctly. Athletic Director Mike Williams said he expects the results of the review will support the team's confidence in Martin.