The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Raisman joins troubling list

Olympic medalist says former team doctor sexually abused her.

- By Will Graves

Olympic gymnast Aly Raisman says she is among the young women sexually abused by a former USA Gymnastics team doctor.

Raisman tells “60 Minutes” she was 15 when she was first treated by Dr. Larry Nassar, who spent more than two decades working with athletes at USA Gymnastics.

He’s now is in jail in Michigan awaiting sentencing after pleading guilty to possession of child pornograph­y.

Raisman, the captain of the 2012 and 2016 Olympic gold-medal winning teams, details the abuse in her book “Fierce,” which will be released Tuesday.

Raisman’s interview with “60 Minutes” will air Sunday night.

Raisman is the latest gymnast to claim she was sexually abused by Nassar.

McKayla Maroney, who won two medals at the 2012 Games as Raisman’s teammate, said last month she was molested for years by Nassar.

Nassar also is awaiting trial on separate criminal sexual conduct charges and has been sued by more than 125 women alleging sexual abuse.

Nassar has pleaded not guilty to the assault charges, and the dozens of civil suits filed in Michigan are in mediation.

USA Gymnastics said in a statement Friday Raisman sharing her personal experience took “great courage” and it is “appalled by the conduct of which Larry Nassar is accused.”

Raisman, 23, has been highly critical of USA Gymnastics in recent months, calling for leadership change at the top of the organizati­on while advocating for athlete’s rights.

USA Gymnastics launched an independen­t review of its policies in the wake of the allegation­s

against Nassar and reporting by the Indianapol­is Star in August 2016 that highlighte­d chronic mishandlin­g of sexual abuse allegation­s against coaches and staff at some of its more than 3,500 clubs across the country.

Nassar began working with USA Gymnastics as an athletic trainer in 1986 and became the national team doctor in 1996.

He stepped down in 2014 but remained on staff before being fired in 2015.

“These girls, they should be comfortabl­e going to USA Gymnastics and saying, ‘I need help, I want therapy. I need this,’ ” Raisman said during the 2017 national championsh­ips in August.

Raisman declined to get into specifics at that time about whether she was abused by Nassar but painted a vivid picture of how Nassar’s behavior went unchecked.

“I think that, you just want, you want to trust people and that he

was just a disgusting person, he took advantage of so many people’s trust,” Raisman said. “And I think, it just disgusts me he was a doctor.

“It’s crazy. Because when a doctor says something you want to believe him and it’s just awful,” she added.

Jamie Dantzscher, a bronze medalist on the 2000 U.S. Olympic team, filed a lawsuit against Nassar in California in September 2016.

She says Nassar touched her inappropri­ately while disguising the abuse as treatment. Dantzscher initially filed as “Jane Doe” but came forward publicly to “60 Minutes” in February.

In June, the gymnastics board adopted the new USA Gymnastics SafeSport Policy that replaced the previous policy.

Key updates include mandatory reporting, defining six types of misconduct, setting standards to prohibit grooming behavior, preventing

inappropri­ate interactio­n and establishi­ng accountabi­lity.

In July, the organizati­on hired Toby Stark, a child welfare advocate, as its director of SafeSport. Part of Stark’s mandate is educating members on rules, educationa­l programs and reporting.

The federation also adopted several recommenda­tions by Deborah Daniels, a former federal prosecutor who oversaw the review.

USA Gymnastics now has the power to withhold membership from clubs that decline to report claims of abuse.

Clubs are now “required to report child abuse or neglect, including sexual misconduct, to proper authoritie­s, including the U.S. Center for SafeSport and law enforcemen­t authoritie­s.”

USA Gymnastics announced Tuesday it hired Kerry Perry as the organizati­on’s new president and CEO.

Perry starts Dec. 1.

 ?? CHANG W. LEE / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? American gymnast Aly Raisman, a three-time Olympic gold medalist, tells “60 Minutes” in an interview airing Sunday, team doctor Lawrence Nassar (inset) sexually abused her.
CHANG W. LEE / THE NEW YORK TIMES American gymnast Aly Raisman, a three-time Olympic gold medalist, tells “60 Minutes” in an interview airing Sunday, team doctor Lawrence Nassar (inset) sexually abused her.

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