Dayton Daily News

Ex-coach gets jail in Nassar-related case

- By Anna Liz Nichols

A former

LANSING, MICH. — Michigan State University head gymnastics coach was sentenced Tuesday to 90 days in jail for lying to police during an investigat­ion into former Olympic and university doctor Larry Nassar.

Kathie Klages, 65, was found guilty in February of a felony and a misdemeano­r for denying she knew of Nassar’s abuse prior to 2016 when survivors started to come forward publicly. She also was sentenced to 18 months of probation.

Klages testified at trial, and in a tearful statement Tuesday, that she did not remember being told about the abuse. She said she had been seeing a therapist to try to remember the conversati­ons, and she apologized to victims if they occurred.

“Even when I don’t express it to others, I struggle with what I’ve been accused of and what my role in this tragedy may have been,” she said in court.

Two women testified in November 2018 that they told Klages in 1997 that Nassar had sexually abused them and spoke Tuesday in court ahead of the sentencing. One of the women, Larissa Boyce, testified that Klages held up a piece of paper in front of the then-teenager and warned that if she filed a report there could be serious consequenc­es.

“I am standing here representi­ng my 16-year-old self who was silenced and humiliated 23 years ago and, unfortunat­ely, all of the hundreds of girls that were abused after me,” Boyce said.

Nassar was sentenced in 2018 to 40 to 175 years in prison for decades of molestatio­n of young women and girls under the guise of medical treatment.

The other woman who testified but has not publicly identified herself read statements from other alleged victims. The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sex crimes unless they grant permission.

She said the way Klages refused to take responsibi­lity and how their memories and testimony were refuted by the defense was “backwards and disappoint­ing.”

“My hope was that she would be sorry and deeply apologize, but that is not the case,” she said. “The first and only adult I had ever told just canceled all of my intuitions that sexual abuse is real and painful. She silenced me not only when I was 14 but for 20 years, as I did not have the confidence to speak up about it again.”

Klages attorney, Mary Chartier, has said if the case had not involved Nassar, Klages would never have been found guilty. She called Nassar a “master manipulato­r” and said Klages sent her granddaugh­ter, daughter and sons to Nassar for health care.

Chartier tried to mitigate Klages’ part in the abuse, saying she was among “thousands” who had been present in the room during Nassar’s treatments, including parents.

Nassar’s accusers say he molested them with his ungloved hands, often without explanatio­n, while they were seeking help for various injuries. He sometimes used a sheet or his body to block the view of any parent in the room.

“Numerous people were told about the procedure — nurses, athletic trainers at other schools, psychologi­sts, doctors and a high school counselor — and they did nothing,” Chartier said, quoting investigat­ion reports.

Nearly 200 letters were submitted to the judge on Klages’ behalf, including from former gymnasts.

Chartier argued jail was an unfit punishment for Klages as a non-violent first offender, and because of her age and a heart murmur, especially during the coronaviru­s pandemic. Defense planned to appeal the sentence.

Judge Joyce Draganchuk said she was confident of COVID-19 safety protocols in the jail.

After the hearing, Boyce said she was relieved to have testified against Klages and Nassar.

“I feel much lighter. I feel like I can breathe. I feel like I can finally move forward and past all this,” Boyce said. “I hope that the fact that she got jail time deters other people and people truly believe children and women who come forward with allegation­s of assault.”

 ?? MATTHEW DAE SMITH / LANSING STATE JOURNAL ?? Flanked by her attorneys, former Michigan State gymnastics coach Kathie Klages was sentenced to 90 days in jail Tuesday.
MATTHEW DAE SMITH / LANSING STATE JOURNAL Flanked by her attorneys, former Michigan State gymnastics coach Kathie Klages was sentenced to 90 days in jail Tuesday.

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