New Straits Times

EX-U.S. DOCTOR JAILED 175 YEARS

Larry Nassar sentenced following accounts from about 160 abuse victims

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AS his victims wept in a courtroom on Wednesday, disgraced longtime USA Gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar was sentenced to up to 175 years’ in prison for abusing young female gymnasts who were entrusted to his care.

“I’ve signed your death warrant,” Ingham County Circuit Court Judge Rosemarie Aquilina told Nassar, following days of accounts from about 160 victims.

Spectators and victims cried, applauded and embraced as Nassar, 54, wearing a dark blue jailhouse jumpsuit, was led out of the courtroom.

Rachael Denholland­er, the first woman to publicly accuse him in 2016, shared a hug with Angela Povilaitis, the lead prosecutor.

After the sentence decision, the president of Michigan State University, where Nassar had worked, said she was resigning after facing a barrage of criticism for not doing enough to halt the abuse.

The United States Olympic committee chief called for all USA Gymnastics directors to resign.

Nassar, who served as the programme’s physician through four Olympic Games, apologised to his victims during the hearing, telling them, “I will carry your words with me for the rest of my days”.

Aquilina dismissed his statement as insincere, and courtroom spectators gasped as the judge read aloud from a letter he wrote to her claiming he was a good doctor who was manipulate­d into pleading guilty.

Nassar, who is serving a 60year sentence in federal prison for child pornograph­y conviction­s, said his accusers fabricated claims to gain money and fame, writing, “Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned”.

“Would you like to withdraw your plea?” Aquilina asked Nassar after tossing aside his letter. “No, your honour,” Nassar said. “Because you are guilty, aren’t you? Are you guilty, sir?” the judge demanded.

After a pause, Nassar said quietly, “I have said my plea, exactly”.

The prosecutio­n and Aquilina emphasised the broader significan­ce of the sentencing, coming amid a national debate over sexual misconduct prompted by accusation­s against powerful men from Hollywood to Washington.

“At this particular moment in history, this sentence and hearing will be viewed as a turning point in how our community, our state, our nation, our culture looks at sexual abuse,” Povilaitis said.

Aquilina rattled off a series of statistics about the prevalence of sexual abuse before saying: “It stops now.”

The sentencing followed an extraordin­ary week-long hearing that saw Nassar’s victims unflinchin­gly, defiantly tell their stories in raw terms.

Despite Nassar’s objections, Aquilina allowed victims who were not part of his guilty plea to speak at his sentencing. Throughout much of the proceeding­s, the bespectacl­ed Nassar sat with his head bowed, rarely making eye contact with his accusers.

The women ranged from famous Olympic gold medalists, like Aly Raisman, to former gymnasts, like Denholland­er, now a lawyer, who was the last of the victims to speak on Wednesday and whom Aquilina described as “the bravest person I have ever had in my courtroom”.

McKayla Maroney, a gold medalist at the 2012 London Olympics, called Nassar a “monster human being”, while a former member of the US national team said his abuse led to depression and an eating disorder.

Another gymnast said she was only 6 when Nassar began molesting her and blamed the doctor for her father’s suicide once he realised she did not lie about the abuse she endured.

“I’ve been forever changed by all of this, and I will never feel small again,” Bailey Lorencen said after the sentencing. She had been an anonymous accuser until she spoke in court this week. “I have a different confidence in myself as a woman.”

In addition to Raisman and Maroney, Olympic gold medalists Simone Biles, Jordyn Wieber and Gabby Douglas went public in recent months with their own accusation­s against Nassar.

Nassar pleaded guilty in November to seven counts of firstdegre­e sex assault in Ingham County, as well as three charges in Eaton County, where he is due to be sentenced next week.

About 140 victims have filed a lawsuit against Nassar, USA Gymnastics and Michigan State University, claiming the institutio­ns knew about allegation­s of abuse years ago and failed to act. The body and the school asked a judge to dismiss the cases.

“As tragedies are politicise­d, blame is inevitable. As president, it is only natural that I am the focus of this anger,” the university’s president, Lou Anna Simon, said in her resignatio­n letter.

Some of the sport’s biggest names said USA Gymnastics was in need of reform.

 ?? AGENCY PIX ?? (Clockwise from left) Judge Rosemarie Aquilina delivering a sentence on Larry Nassar, a former USA Gymnastics doctor, in Lansing, Michigan, on Wednesday. Prosecutor Angela Povilaitis (left) embracing victim Rachael Denholland­er. Victims and others at...
AGENCY PIX (Clockwise from left) Judge Rosemarie Aquilina delivering a sentence on Larry Nassar, a former USA Gymnastics doctor, in Lansing, Michigan, on Wednesday. Prosecutor Angela Povilaitis (left) embracing victim Rachael Denholland­er. Victims and others at...
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