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Kyle Beach, Chicago Blackhawks agree to mediation in hopes of settling sexual assault lawsuit

Kyle Beach, the former player who sued the Chicago Blackhawks alleging the team did nothing when he raised allegations of sexual assault against an assistant coach in 2010, has agreed to mediation in hopes of settling the case.

Beach's attorney, Susan Loggans, confirmed the development Tuesday. She also confirmed the judge in the case had denied her motion to move the case into the discovery phase, which would have opened the way for each side to procure evidence.

Mediation is set to begin Dec. 15, the Chicago Sun-Times reported. Beach is seeking in excess of $50,000 from the team, though the exact amount was not specified.

Beach accused video coach Brad Aldrich of sexually assaulting him in 2010 and said the team largely ignored the allegations. An independent review, commissioned by the team in response to two lawsuits as the case exploded in the headlines, showed the Blackhawks badly mishandled Beach's allegations.

The fallout included top executives losing their jobs in Chicago and stretched to other teams, including the Florida Panthers, where veteran coach Joel Quenneville -- the coach of the Blackhawks at the time of Beach's initial allegations -- resigned. The NHL fined Chicago $2 million.

Loggans and attorneys for the Blackhawks held settlement talks in early November after the investigation's findings were released, meeting for about an hour. She said after those discussions that "each side had different viewpoints."

The investigation found no evidence that owner Rocky Wirtz or his son, chairman Danny Wirtz, were aware of the allegations before the lawsuit was brought to their attention this year. Danny Wirtz in October said he has instructed team attorneys to seek "a fair resolution consistent with the totality of the circumstances."

Loggans is also part of a second lawsuit against the team by a former high school student, whom Aldrich was convicted of assaulting in Michigan after he left Chicago. Talks between both sides are continuing over that pending lawsuit.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.