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Timothy Busfield Hit With New 2001 Sex Abuse Claim
Jan 15, 2026
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A New Allegation Reaches Back 25 Years
Timothy Busfield, the Emmy-winning actor millions remember from “Thirtysomething” and “The West Wing,” is facing a new allegation of sexual abuse that dates back roughly a quarter of a century. According to prosecutors in New Mexico, a man has come forward alleging that his daughter was abused by Busfield during a teenage audition at a theater he founded.
The claim centers on an alleged incident at B Street Theatre in Sacramento, California, when the accuser was 16 and trying out for a role. The story is now surfacing publicly decades later, as part of a broader investigation that has already put the longtime television fixture under intense scrutiny.
For fans who grew up watching him on prestige dramas and classic sports films, the details are jarring. The case now stretches across states, legal jurisdictions, and an entire era of Hollywood history.
‘Thirtysomething’ Star Pulled Back Into The Spotlight
Busfield became a familiar face on prime time television with his role as Elliot Weston on “Thirtysomething,” then moved into political drama on “The West Wing” and films like “Field of Dreams.” Off-screen, he built a parallel life in theater, founding B Street Theatre in Sacramento and nurturing regional productions far from the red carpet.
That legacy is now under a harsh new light. Prosecutors in New Mexico recently disclosed that a fresh allegation involving Busfield had been reported to law enforcement. Legal documents, as described by TMZ, state that a man named Colin Swift told authorities his daughter was sexually abused by Busfield “several years ago” at B Street Theatre. Investigators now place the alleged incident in 2001, about 25 years ago.
The new allegation of sexual abuse against the embattled Timothy Busfield is from an alleged incident that happened a quarter century ago … TMZ has learned.
The report does not name the daughter, who was a minor at the time of the alleged abuse. According to the account given to law enforcement, she was 16 and auditioning for Busfield when the alleged incident took place.
The B Street Theatre Audition At The Center
The allegation reaches back to a period when Busfield was closely associated with B Street Theatre, the Sacramento company he helped build into a respected regional institution. At the time of the alleged incident, he was a prominent creative force with power over auditions and casting.
In the story relayed to prosecutors, the audition that should have been a career stepping stone for a teenage performer instead became the moment at the heart of a criminal investigation. That single encounter, allegedly behind the walls of a small California theater almost 25 years ago, is now connected to a wider legal probe unfolding in New Mexico.
The timeline matters. B Street Theatre has confirmed that Busfield has not been formally involved in the organization since 2001, the same year prosecutors now associate with the alleged abuse. His links to the theater today are mostly historical, even as its name suddenly appears in new headlines.
What B Street Theatre Is Saying Now
With Busfield under the legal microscope, B Street Theatre is working to draw a firm line between its current operations and the actor who founded it. In a detailed statement to TMZ, the company acknowledged the report and addressed its past connection to Busfield.
“B Street Theatre is aware of a report concerning Timothy Busfield regarding an incident alleged to have occurred at B Street Theatre approximately 25 years ago.”
The theater says it responded at the time with its own internal steps. “B Street Theatre retained legal counsel at the time to conduct an internal investigation, and Mr. Busfield has not had any role in the organization since 2001. He is not involved in our current operations, staff, leadership, or programming. Although he is listed as an emeritus board member, he has not participated in theatre governance or attended a board meeting since that time.”
The organization also pointed to the current law enforcement process that now surrounds Busfield. “Because this matter is now part of an ongoing investigation related to a separate alleged incident in New Mexico, we are unable to provide further comment at this time.”
Finally, B Street Theatre tried to center its statement on safety and the broader impact of abuse. “As an organization that has served Sacramento and the greater region for decades, our mission remains to provide a safe, creative, and inclusive environment for artists, students, families, and audiences. Our thoughts are with everyone affected by abuse or exploitation in any form.”
A Theater’s Legacy And A Hollywood Name
For long-time patrons of B Street Theatre, the idea that its founder is now associated with serious criminal allegations is deeply unsettling. The company has spent decades positioning itself as a haven for students, artists, and families. Now it must contend with renewed attention on what it did in response to a report involving its most famous name.
The internal investigation the theater describes took place years ago, beyond the public eye. There is no public record in the statement of what that investigation concluded, what specific actions were taken at the time, or whether law enforcement was formally involved then. What is clear from the theater’s words is that Busfield’s active role effectively ended in 2001 and that he has not participated in governance since.
Yet his name has lingered on materials as an emeritus board member and as the founder who helped shape the theater’s early identity. That tension, between past influence and present distance, is now being publicly negotiated as the allegations receive national attention.
An Ongoing Investigation And A Denial
The new 2001 B Street Theatre allegation is not emerging in isolation. B Street Theatre itself notes that the matter is tied to an “ongoing investigation related to a separate alleged incident in New Mexico.” TMZ previously reported that Busfield has faced legal scrutiny there, and this fresh accusation has now been folded into that wider probe.
Photo: Bernalillo County Detention Center
So far, the public record contains only limited details about the New Mexico case and how prosecutors are connecting the earlier California allegation to their current work. The involvement of law enforcement in two states, however, signals that investigators are examining potential patterns that may stretch over time and geography.
For his part, Busfield has denied the allegations he is facing. He has not publicly addressed the specific B Street Theatre claim described by prosecutors, but his overall position, as reported by TMZ, is that he rejects the accusations against him.
In the court of public opinion, the contrast is stark. On one side, a father, Colin Swift, telling authorities that his daughter was abused as a teenager in a setting that should have been safe. On the other, an actor who once played idealistic and principled characters on beloved series, now maintaining his innocence as investigators continue their work.
Fame, Power, And The Weight Of Old Allegations
For viewers who first met Busfield as the earnest colleague in “The West Wing” press room or the complicated husband on “Thirtysomething,” this new chapter is a sharp departure from the roles that defined his on-screen persona. The gentle nostalgia around those series now collides with the sober language of prosecutors, legal documents, and internal investigations.
Allegations that date back decades present familiar challenges. Memories fade, witnesses move, and institutional responses from the time may not match current expectations about transparency and accountability. Yet the emotional weight for those who say they were harmed rarely diminishes, especially when the alleged abuser held professional power over them.
As the New Mexico investigation continues, the story of Timothy Busfield now lives in two worlds at once. In one, he is a fixture of classic television that still streams into living rooms and laptops. In the other, he is an accused figure in a long-running legal and moral reckoning, with a 2001 audition in a Sacramento theater at its core.
What happens next will be determined in courtrooms and prosecutor offices, not on soundstages. For now, the legacy of a once familiar prime time presence is under review, not by critics, but by the criminal justice system, and by everyone who ever believed a theater or a set was a place where young talent could safely chase a dream.