The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US Senate subcommitt­ee seeks FBI probe

- - AFP

WASHINGTON: A US Senate subcommitt­ee is seeking FBI investigat­ion of former US Olympic Committee chief executive Scott Blackmun for making "materially false statements" to lawmakers probing sexual abuse in gymnastics.

Republican Senator Jerry Moran, the chairman of the Senate subcommitt­ee on commerce, and Senator Richard Blumenthal, the highest ranking Democrat on the panel, issued a joint statement on Friday saying they had referred the matter to the FBI.

The move comes after a damning report released on Monday that said the USOC failed to react swiftly when first warned of allegation­s surroundin­g former gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar in 2015.

Instead, according to the report commission­ed by the USOC and carried out by Boston law firm Ropes and Gray, they concealed the doctor's crimes until the scandal erupted into public view in late 2016.

Nassar was jailed for life earlier this year afer abusing more than 250 athletes, inducing several stars of the United States' gold medal-winning teams at the 2012 and 2016 Olympics.

The senators cited Blackmun's written testimony to the subcommitt­ee that when he heard of the allegation­s against Nassar in a July 2015 telephone call from then USA Gymnastics chief Steve Penny that he spoke to the USOC's "SafeSport staff" -- which oversees abuse claims in Olympic sports.

But they noted that independen­t investigat­ors found no evidence supporting Blackmun's claim that he held a meeting with USOC staff to make sure the matter was properly pursued.

"The Subcommitt­ee takes its oversight role seriously and it appears that Mr. Blackmun has made false claims and misled our Subcommitt­ee -- harming the investigat­ion and the ability to develop policy," the senators said. "Just as importantl­y, survivors of abuse have had to wait longer for the truth and longer for systemic changes to help prevent others from similar injury."

Blackmun stepped down in February amid stinging criticism of his handling of the case, not long after disclosing he was battling prostate cancer.

The Ropes and Gray report indicates that USOC chairman Larry Probst and then board member Susanne Lyons -- who will take over as chair next year -- were not aware of the allegation­s against Nassar until the scandal broke in the media.

Probst said Friday after his final board meeting before departing at the end of the year that he couldn't comment on Blackmun's testimony to the Senate subcommitt­ee or the senators' action on it.

"I don't think it's appropriat­e for me to speculate on what Scott was thinking or not thinking," Probst said. "Obviously the system broke down in many aspects."

Lyons said board members were committed to making changes that would prevent a similar breakdown, but offered no specifics. Board members were briefed Friday by Ropes and Gray personnel on their findings.

"One of the questions we asked was given that we did not learn this informatio­n, that there was a failure of transparen­cy where the informatio­n did not move up the pipeline, we asked what we could learn from that and what we could have done differentl­y," Lyons said.

"Ropes said they felt the whole organizati­on was disabled, in a sense, from being able to take appropriat­e action because that informatio­n did not flow. They didn't have a simple suggestion or answer but it certainly tells us that we have to reinforce very clearly what type of informatio­n flows up to the board and make sure we are asking the appropriat­e questions so that things cannot go unsaid and things cannot go concealed."

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