The Phnom Penh Post

Why did so many ignore their pleas?

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ANY doubts that monsters can be real were put to rest by the more than 150 brave women and girls who told a Michigan judge over seven days how Dr Larry Nassar molested them in the guise of treating them. Some of the abuse, which went on for decades, started when they were as young as 6. When Nassar committed his crimes, he was working as a doctor for the US Olympic gymnastics team, for Michigan State University, for USA Gymnastics – the sport’s governing body – and elsewhere.

As agonisingl­y recounted during a sentencing hearing, several girls over the years turned to one authority or another for help, and received none. Adults who suspect a predator is on the prowl and do nothing are simply monsters in another form.

Nassar pleaded guilty to sexually molesting seven young athletes. Judge Rosemarie Aquilina guaranteed on Wednesday that he would never again be free, after sentencing him to 40 to 175 years in prison.

But he is not the only one who deserves to be called to account. An investigat­ion commission­ed by USA Gymnastics and released last year found that its board repeatedly turned a blind eye to Nassar’s abuses. An investigat­ive series by the Indianapol­is Star found that the organisati­on had covered up accusation­s of abuses by many coaches, not just Nassar. Three key board members, including the chairman, Paul Parilla, resigned on Monday.

That’s a start, but it’s not enough. The US Olympic Committee said it is considerin­g decertifyi­ng USA Gymnastics, but the Olympic committee was also slow to act in the Nassar case. What changes will it implement to ensure that such widespread harm to American athletes doesn’t happen under its watch again?

The resignatio­n on Wednesday of Lou Anna Simon, the president of Michigan State, where Nassar’s medical practice was based, was overdue. Though Michigan State has denied covering up Nassar’s crimes, reporting by the Detroit News found that 14 university officials were told of Nassar’s sexual misconduct in the two decades before he was arrested, and that at least eight women had reported his actions. Michigan State continued to allow Nassar to see patients for 16 months while he was under criminal investigat­ion after a 2014 allegation of sexual assault by a patient.

The athletic trainers, assistant coaches, university police officers and other school officials who let Nassar’s abuse go on should also step down. The NCAA, which is said to be investigat­ing the matter, should consider sanctions against Michigan State, including banning it from postseason play for some period, as it did Penn State’s football program after former assistant coach Jerry Sandusky was convicted of molesting children over a period of 15 years.

In all these instances, including cases detailed by Harper’s Magazine in an article on competitiv­e swimming, athletic glory, or the glow reflected onto those surroundin­g and enriching themselves from young athletes, blinded adults to their real responsibi­lities.

Protecting the image of the Olympic team, a gymnastics program and a university seems to have meant more to these adults than protecting children. In the end they protected nothing and no one and ruined their own reputation­s as well.

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