Olympian abused by team doctor sees USA Gymnastics as 'rotten'
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[January 20, 2018]
By Steve Friess
LANSING, Mich. (Reuters) - Olympic gold
medalist Aly Raisman blasted U.S. gymnastics officials on Friday for
failing to protect her and other women from years of sexual abuse by
former team doctor Larry Nassar, calling the sport's governing body
"rotten from the inside."
Raisman, co-captain of the U.S. women’s gymnastics squad at the 2012
London and 2016 Rio de Janeiro Summer Games, called for an
independent investigation into U.S. gymnastics and Olympic officials
who she said had the power to stop Nassar.
Nassar pleaded guilty to 10 counts of first-degree sexual assault in
November.
“For this sport to go on, we need to demand real change, and we need
to be willing to fight for it," she said.
"It’s clear now that if we leave it up to these organizations,
history is likely to repeat itself," she said, referring to USA
Gymnastics and the U.S. Olympic Committee.
The 23-year-old gymnast was the latest of dozens of athletes to
testify this week at a hearing ahead of Nassar's sentencing at the
Ingham County Circuit Court in Michigan.
Many of them spoke tearfully of how the abuse at the hands of
Nassar, the former national medical coordinator for USA Gymnastics,
left them emotionally scarred and angry.
In calling for an independent investigation, Raisman said she was
dismayed that USA Gymnastics had offered only "empty promises" as
the scandal unfolded.
Raisman, who won six Olympic medals, three of them gold, during her
career, called on the governing body's newly installed CEO Kerry
Perry to heed a chorus of demands for more accountability.
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Victim and Olympic gold medalist Aly Raisman appears before speaking
at the sentencing hearing for Larry Nassar, a former team USA
Gymnastics doctor who pleaded guilty in November 2017 to sexual
assault charges, in Lansing, Michigan, U.S., January 19, 2018.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
“Unfortunately you have taken on an organization that is rotten from
the inside,” Raisman said to Perry, who was not in the courtroom on
Friday. “You will be judged by how you deal with this."
Glaring at the former team doctor as she read a 15-minute statement
during a fourth day of hearings in the Lansing, Michigan courtroom,
Raisman defiantly told Nassar that his victims were no longer
isolated and weak.
“We have our voices and we will not be silenced," she said. "I’m no
longer that little girl you met in Australia who you first began
grooming and manipulating.”
Prosecutors have asked for a sentence of 40 to 125 years for Nassar,
54, who was also a prominent physician at a Michigan State
University sports clinic. That would add to a 60-year sentence he is
serving in federal prison on child pornography convictions.
With about 120 victims now expected to make statements at the
hearing, more than initially expected, Nassar’s sentencing has been
delayed to early next week.
(Reporting by Steve Friess; Writing by Frank McGurty; editing by Ben
Klayman and Clive McKeef)
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