Albuquerque Journal

Ignoring a crime can result in heartbreak­ing damage to the victims

“The world is a dangerous place to live; not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don’t do anything about it.”

- Syndicated Columnist www.DianeDimon­d.com; email Diane@DianeDimon­d.com.

— Albert Einstein

Dr. Stanley Weber worked for the Indian Health Service as a pediatrici­an for more than two decades. He was assigned to reservatio­n facilities in Montana and South Dakota. He also worked in New Mexico for a time. In 1995, three years into his Montana service, a supervisor suspected the unmarried doctor, who hoarded children’s toys in his basement, was a pedophile, and dismissed Weber from his position at a Browning hospital. But, the IHS didn’t fire Weber. Bosses quietly transferre­d him to a facility in Pine Ridge, South Dakota, where he treated children for another 21 years. Only after a joint PBS/Wall Street Journal exposé on Weber did the IHS commission an independen­t investigat­ion into the scandal. The final report was kept secret … until a court recently ordered it released. The investigat­ion concluded IHS supervisor­s in both states never followed up credible complaints against Weber sexually abusing young boys, moved to silence and punish whistleblo­wers, and went out of their way to ignore the allegation­s because to follow up would be “awkward, arduous, inconvenie­nt, messy and embarrassi­ng.”

Seems like a case of deliberate and negligent malfeasanc­e.

So, what should society do with supervisor­s whose blasé response likely resulted in countless children being sexually abused? Do they … get a free pass for their profound derelictio­n of duty? Shouldn’t they be charged with being an accessory to a crime, much like the driver of a bank robber’s get-away car?

Then, there is the case of FBI agents in the Indianapol­is field office who, in September 2015, took a sex abuse complaint from Olympic gymnast McKayla Maroney. She reported that the team’s doctor, Larry Nassar, had sexually assaulted her on multiple occasions and executives at Team USA Gymnastics refused to remove him. The FBI agents, including the supervisor of the office … did nothing about Maroney’s complaint for 17 months — allowing Nassar extra time to abuse more young athletes. After media reports, the FBI was forced to act. It was … revealed that the FBI supervisor had been simultaneo­usly investigat­ing Nassar and talking with USA Gymnastics about … a job with the organizati­on. He lied to federal investigat­ors about those conversati­ons and other investigat­ory details, but no disciplina­ry action was taken against either agent. Now, six years after Maroney’s revelation­s to the FBI, and after a stunning 156 victims of Nassar have come forward, the DOJ says it is reviewing the possibilit­y of prosecutin­g the two agents. Don’t these cases remind you of the Catholic Church’s handling of its pedophile priest problem? Of course they do; they are from the same playbook: Ignore serious complaints, transfer transgress­ors out of state and hope the problem is buried forever.

Again, I wonder about the culpabilit­y of those in charge: The IHS hospital administra­tors, Team USA Gymnastics executives, the original FBI agents, the decision-makers at the DOJ who initially cleared the agents of wrongdoing. These are the safety net folks who are supposed to uphold the rules and laws. Where does their responsibi­lity begin and end, and do we ever hold them accountabl­e?

The administra­tors had every reason to believe something horrible was happening to young people, yet … refused to carry out the duties they were paid to perform, and let victims feel as if no one cared. Yes, in the end, Stanley Weber was finally stopped. Last year, at the age of 71, he was sentenced to five life terms on multiple sex abuse offenses against children in South Dakota. He was sentenced previously to 18 years in Montana. And Larry Nassar, 54, has been sent to prison for up to 175 years. The Justice Department called him a “hands-on child predator,” and said he consumed and possessed “child pornograph­y on a massive scale.” It is very likely both Weber and Nassar will die in federal prison.

The business of justice isn’t done, however, until those who could have stopped these crimes … are dealt with. We are talking about serious negligence that resulted in heartbreak­ing, lifelong damage to countless young people. It’s high time they paid a price, too.

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