Jury Finds Former RI High School Basketball Coach Not Guilty of Sex Crimes

A Washington County jury has cleared former high school basketball coach Aaron Thomas of the most serious charges against him but convicted him of two misdemeanors for subjecting his students to “naked fat tests.”

Former North Kingstown High School boys basketball coach Aaron Thomas, right, and defense attorney John McDonald as the verdict in Thomas' trial is read on May 19, 2025.
Former North Kingstown High School boys basketball coach Aaron Thomas, right, and defense attorney John McDonald as the verdict in Thomas’ trial is read on May 19, 2025.
Pool photo
Share
Former North Kingstown High School boys basketball coach Aaron Thomas, right, and defense attorney John McDonald as the verdict in Thomas' trial is read on May 19, 2025.
Former North Kingstown High School boys basketball coach Aaron Thomas, right, and defense attorney John McDonald as the verdict in Thomas’ trial is read on May 19, 2025.
Pool photo
Jury Finds Former RI High School Basketball Coach Not Guilty of Sex Crimes
Copy

At Washington County Superior Court, the jury had four charges in all to decide against former North Kingstown High School boys basketball coach Aaron Thomas. On Monday, jurors found Thomas not guilty on two felony counts of second-degree child molestation and second-degree sexual assault, and guilty on two misdemeanor counts of battery.

The split verdict means Thomas will face some consequences for subjecting his athletes to naked fat tests behind closed doors at his North Kingstown High School office. But he won’t be considered a sex offender.

“We are very satisfied that the jury saw the case as we did: no sexual intent whatsoever,” defense attorney John McDonald said.

Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha suggested the case against the coach might have been stronger given a longer statute of limitations.

Neronha said in a statement, “We believe that what took place here was not just bad judgment, it was, and always has been, criminal conduct.”

Attorney General Peter Neronha and a coalition of states forced the Trump administration to restore nearly $7 billion in frozen U.S. Department of Education funding, including $29 million for Rhode Island schools
Gov. Dan McKee revised a previous plan to eliminate bus routes and instead proposed service reductions on 46 of the system’s 58 routes
State officials joined with union leaders to condemn the abrupt decision by the Trump Administration to stop work on a project that’s roughly 80% completed

After battling lupus, pulmonary hypertension, Graves’ Disease, and leukemia while raising four children, Amy Dolan created Mothers Healing Fund to provide financial relief and holistic support for moms in Rhode Island and beyond
New round of Wavemaker tax credits has $500K carveout for college graduates who work in primary care
For the past two years, the McKee administration has funded out-of-school learning opportunities to complement students’ traditional schooling