Chattanooga Times Free Press

Sex abuse scandal is far from over at Michigan State University

- BY ED WHITE AND DAVID EGGERT

LANSING, Mich. — Sports doctor Larry Nassar is on his way to prison for the rest of his life for molesting scores of young female athletes, but the scandal is far from over at Michigan State University as victims, lawmakers and a judge demand to know why he wasn’t stopped years ago.

Some are likening Michigan State to Penn State University, where three senior officials, including the school’s president, were sentenced to jail last year for failing to tell authoritie­s about a sexual abuse allegation involving coach Jerry Sandusky.

Nassar, a 54-year-old former member of the university’s sports medicine staff, has admitted penetratin­g elite gymnasts and other athletes with his fingers while he was supposedly treating them for injuries.

Some of the more than 150 women and girls who have accused him said they complained to the sports medicine staff, a campus counselor and the women’s gymnastics coach as far back as the late 1990s.

In Michigan, it is a misdemeano­r punishable by up to three months in jail and a $500 fine for certain profession­als to fail to report a suspected case of child abuse.

No one has been charged in the scandal besides Nassar.

Lou Anna Simon, who resigned under pressure Wednesday as Michigan State’s president, insisted, “There is no cover-up.” But the university last week asked Michigan’s attorney general to conduct a review. And in sentencing Nassar to 40 to 175 years in prison, Judge Rosemarie Aquilina called for “a massive investigat­ion as to why there was inaction, why there was silence.”

Jennifer Paine, a Michigan lawyer who specialize­s in child protection law and is not involved in the Nassar case, said there are probably grounds for charging some

Michigan State staff members for failing to report what victims were saying.

“The obligation to report doesn’t mean anything unless people enforce. That’s why it’s there,” she said.

John Manly, an attorney who represents more than 100 victims in lawsuits, said Michigan State, USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Olympic Committee “miserably failed children.” Nassar was a team doctor at USA Gymnastics, which trains Olympians.

“They had an opportunit­y, instead of being Penn State, to make them a beacon of how to handle this,” Manly said. “It’s too late. You can’t fix it now.”

Penn State’s former president, Graham Spanier, and two other ex-administra­tors, Tim Curley and Gary Schultz, were prosecuted for child endangerme­nt for not reporting a 2001 complaint about Sandusky showering with a boy. Sandusky’s arrest a decade later blew up into a scandal that brought down legendary football coach Joe Paterno.

Kyle Stephens, who was a Nassar family friend, said he molested her for years at his Lansing-area home. She said she told a campus counselor, Gary Stollak, about the abuse in 2004. Nassar met with Stollak and denied it, and no police report was made.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Michigan State University President Lou Anna Simon listens during a school function on Oct. 20. Simon submitted her resignatio­n Wednesday amid an outcry over the school’s handling of allegation­s against Larry Nassar.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Michigan State University President Lou Anna Simon listens during a school function on Oct. 20. Simon submitted her resignatio­n Wednesday amid an outcry over the school’s handling of allegation­s against Larry Nassar.

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