USA Gymnastics quiet on board resignation
call after abuse scandal
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[January 26, 2018]
(Reuters) - The leadership of USA
Gymnastics remained silent on Friday in the face of pressure from U.S.
Olympic officials and others to resign en masse two days after the team
doctor was sentenced for abusing female athletes.
As of Friday morning, USA Gymnastics had not issued an official comment
on the call for its 18 listed directors to step down after long-time
team doctor Larry Nassar was sentenced on Wednesday to up to 175 years
in prison for sexually assaulting young female gymnasts.
Nassar, 54, was jailed for carrying out the attacks on young girls under
the guise of medical treatment following a week-long hearing in which
more than 150 accusers recounted their stories in a Michigan courtroom.
One of those 18 directors, Kevin Martinez, an ESPN executive, told
Reuters on Thursday he had cut ties with the gymnastics federation,
after the U.S. Olympic Committee's chief executive threatened to
decertify USA Gymnastics unless all board members were removed.
The U.S. Olympic Committee's CEO, Scott Blackmun, joined the chorus
calling for resignations, CNN reported early on Friday.
The board will lose its status as a sports governing body unless all of
its current members resign by Wednesday and an interim board is in place
by February 28, the network reported.
None of the remaining listed directors was immediately available for
comment.
Many of the victims also came out with criticism of the U.S. Olympic
Committee for not doing enough to prevent the abuse.
"Where is the accountability?," multiple Olympic gold medalist gymnast
Aly Raisman wrote on her Twitter feed on Thursday in a message directed
both at USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Olympic Committee.
"According to my knowledge, Larry Nassar did not have a medical license
in Texas where we trained for the Olympics. How could you allow this?,"
she wrote.
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Larry Nassar, a former team USA Gymnastics doctor, who pleaded
guilty in November 2017 to sexual assault charges, is led from the
courtroom after listening to victim testimony during his sentencing
hearing in Lansing, Michigan, U.S., January 23, 2018.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid.
Martinez's departure comes after three other members, who held the
USAG board's leadership positions, stepped down on Monday. The
scandal has already cost USAG sponsors and heavily damaged its
reputation.
The group said in a statement on Wednesday in response to the
resignation demand by the U.S. Olympic Committee that there should
be "meaningful change within our organization," and has not
commented beyond that.
Lou Anna Simon, the president of Michigan State University, where
Nassar also worked, stepped down on Wednesday after facing a barrage
of criticism for not doing enough to halt the abuse.
About 160 of Nassar's victims gave harrowing personal accounts of
what they suffered at his sentencing hearing in Lansing, Michigan.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax in New York and Jon Herskovitz in Austin,
Texas; Additional reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta; Editing by
Richard Balmforth)
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