National Post

Athlete speaks up in Charest sex scandal

- Morgan Lowrie

MONTREAL• Twenty years after she says she was told to keep quiet about Bertrand Charest’s alleged abuses to avoid losing sponsorshi­ps, Allison Forsyth is speaking out to make sure it doesn’t happen to anyone else.

The former Olympian, who alleges she was sexually abused by Charest in 1997 and 1998, says she has struggled with guilt, shame and anxiety as a result.

“I went through years and years of whistleblo­wer guilt, where I felt abandoned and alone and nobody cared that this had happened because everybody tried to cover it up,” she said Wednesday.

Forsyth, now 39, said she was one of the athletes who came forward in 1998, when Alpine Canada first became aware of Charest’s sexual contact with several of his teenage students.

“I was told, ‘Do not say anything, because we would lose our sponsors’ and it would end my career,” she said.

Charest was found guilty last June of 37 of the 57 sexrelated charges he was facing, and was eventually given a 12-year prison term. The conviction­s involved nine of the 12 women who’d accused him of crimes that occurred more than 20 years ago, when the victims and alleged victims were aged between 12 and 19.

Forsyth is one of eight victims and alleged victims who have chosen to identify themselves in recent days.

The native of Nanaimo, B.C., is struggling with having the word “alleged” attached to her descriptio­n of events and her status as a victim. That’s because Charest was not convicted on the charges involving Forsyth due to jurisdicti­onal issues, because the alleged incidents occurred outside of Canada.

Despite what she calls the intricacie­s of the law, she says one thing is clear: “All of the 12 of us, plus many more, were definitely victims of this horrible man.”

Forsyth went on to have an illustriou­s skiing career, including five World Cup giant slalom medals and a bronze at the 2003 world alpine championsh­ips. She also represente­d Canada in the Olympics in 2002 in Salt Lake City.

But all that time she was struggling.

“I was not the same person after as I was before,” she said. “I had a very tumultuous career after. I was very depressed, medicated for anxiety. I had anorexia issues.”

Forsyth, now a mother of three, says no system was put in place to support athletes when she was skiing and that none of them were given any lessons on what constitute­d appropriat­e behaviour from coaches.

The trial judge in Charest’s case ripped into Alpine Canada, saying the organizati­on’s leaders closed their eyes to Charest’s actions and failed miserably in their duty to protect the young athletes.

The chair of the board of Alpine Canada has since acknowledg­ed in a statement that “the organizati­on could have offered more support to the victims in this difficult time.”

 ?? CHRIS DONOVAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? After coming forward in 1998 alleging former Alpine Canada coach Bertrand Charest had abused her, skier Allison Forsyth says “I was told, ‘Do not say anything, because we would lose our sponsors’ and it would end my career.”
CHRIS DONOVAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS After coming forward in 1998 alleging former Alpine Canada coach Bertrand Charest had abused her, skier Allison Forsyth says “I was told, ‘Do not say anything, because we would lose our sponsors’ and it would end my career.”

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