Michigan special prosecutor to probe
university in Nassar case
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[January 29, 2018]
By Daniel Trotta
(Reuters) - Michigan's attorney general on
Saturday named a special prosecutor to lead an "open and ongoing"
investigation of Michigan State University after campus sports doctor
Larry Nassar sexually assaulted athletes over nearly 20 years.
Retired Kent County Prosecutor William Forsyth was named independent
special prosecutor and will produce a public report on his findings. He
will work closely with Michigan State Police Director Kriste Kibbey
Etue, Attorney General Bill Schuette said.
"My department and this investigation will find out who knew what, and
when," said Schuette, who promised the probe would speak with each of
the 156 known victims.
The case of Nassar, 54, has rocked Michigan State University, where he
was a faculty member and physician at an on-campus clinic. He also
worked for USA Gymnastics as a doctor to Olympic athletes, leading to
the resignation of the entire board of the sport's governing body.
Michigan State University President Lou Anna Simon stepped down under
pressure on Wednesday, and Athletic Director Mark Hollis announced his
retirement on Friday. Both said they were unaware of Nassar's abuse
until it was reported publicly.
Congress and the U.S. Olympic Committee are also investigating the
Nassar case, with the U.S. House of Representatives examining
allegations of sexual harassment by officials in other sports, including
swimming and taekwondo.
Ingham County Judge Rosemarie Aquilina sentenced Nassar to 40 to 175
years in prison on Wednesday after he had pleaded guilty to sexual
assault charges and some 150 victims told their stories in raw and
unflinching terms.
Many described how he penetrated their bodies with his fingers without
permission, gloves or lubrication, claiming it was treatment for sports
injuries.Nassar's sentencing came amid a wave of sexual abuse and
harassment allegations leveled against powerful men during the past
year. Changing attitudes have led more women to denounce their abusers
and be believed.
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Larry Nassar, a former team USA Gymnastics doctor, who pleaded
guilty in November 2017 to sexual assault charges, returns from a
break to listen to victim testimony in the courtroom during his
sentencing hearing in Lansing, Michigan, U.S., January 23, 2018.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
At Michigan State, athletes had been complaining about Nassar since
the 1990s, but the university did not open an investigation until
2014.
"Let's be very clear. No individual and no department at Michigan
State University is off limits," Schuette said on Saturday, without
commenting on whether he expected the probe to produce more criminal
charges.
He did not take questions from reporters at the televised address,
during which he was flanked by Forsyth and Etue.Forsyth served as
Kent County prosecutor for 40 years and chose not to seek
re-election in 2016.
He had overseen more than 40 murder trials and occasionally handled
high-profile prosecutions himself, such as the 2008 murder
conviction of a man who shot and killed a Grand Rapids police
officer, according to the Grand Rapids Press.
Forsyth said he was "outraged" by the Nassar case and wanted to know
why nobody stopped his "predatory conduct" for almost 20 years.
"Who at Michigan State knew and was aware of what he was doing
because they had been told by some of these victims? And once told
what did employees of Michigan State University do with that
information?" Forsyth said.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta in New York; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn and
Daniel Wallis)
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