USA TODAY International Edition

Olympians under investigat­ion

Allegation­s revolve around sexual abuse

- Christine Brennan

The U. S. Center for SafeSport has opened an investigat­ion into an allegation of sexual abuse of a 13- year- old American female figure skater by French Olympic pairs skater Morgan Cipres in 2017, according to the girl, her parents and emails obtained by USA TODAY Sports.

The girl and her parents also said Cipres’ coaches, John Zimmerman, a 2002 Olympian and member of the U. S. Figure Skating Hall of Fame, and Silvia Fontana, a 2002 and 2006 Olympian representi­ng Italy, tried to keep the family from reporting the alleged incident to authoritie­s by shaming and threatenin­g the girl as Cipres, who then was 26, prepared for the 2018 Winter Olympics.

The girl and her parents are not being identified because USA TODAY Sports does not publish the names of alleged victims of sexual abuse.

On Dec. 3, 2017, Cipres allegedly direct messaged two photos of his penis on Instagram to the girl, who skated at the same rink as Cipres in Wesley Chapel, Florida. USA TODAY Sports has reviewed those messages, which were sent from what appears to be Cipres’ verified account.

The girl and her parents said a fourth

adult also was involved in the alleged incident. Vinny Dispenza, another coach at the AdventHeal­th Center Ice rink, allegedly told the girl and another underage girl, whose family could not be reached for comment, to message Cipres asking him to send the photos to the girls in exchange for the promise of a pizza from Dispenza.

Zimmerman and Fontana, who are married to each other, were made aware of the photos in a meeting with Dispenza at their home that evening, the girl and her parents said.

The girl and her parents said that instead of going to police or SafeSport, which opened in March 2017 to investigat­e sexual abuse in Olympic sports, Zimmerman and Fontana implored them to stay quiet because Cipres and his pairs partner, Vanessa James, were in the final stages of their preparatio­n for the Olympics in South Korea, where they finished fifth.

The girl and her parents allege Zimmerman and Fontana intimidate­d the girl for several weeks, telling her that she was at fault for receiving the pictures because she was a “pretty girl and men have their needs,” that no one would believe her and that she would be shamed on social media, particular­ly in France, where Cipres is popular.

Dispenza also allegedly issued a threat. “If I said something, he said I would never skate again,” the girl said.

When asked Monday morning over the phone if he sent the photos of himself to the girl, Cipres replied, “I cannot talk with you about anything about that. I mean, I have nothing to say about this allegation. I have nothing, nothing, nothing to say about anything about that so I’m sorry, I cannot talk to you.”

After USA TODAY Sports sought comment from Zimmerman, Fontana and Dispenza Monday, they issued a joint statement Tuesday afternoon:

“We are completely shocked by the recent allegation­s made in this article. We were not contacted by SafeSport and there are currently no claims against us. We hold ourselves to the highest standards of safety and profession­alism. We deny the allegation­s and look forward to clearing up this matter which we take very seriously.”

In a statement to USA TODAY Sports, U. S. Figure Skating said that it “does not tolerate misconduct or abuse and encourages anyone who has been abused or suspects abuse to report it to the U. S. Center for SafeSport, local law enforcemen­t or U. S. Figure Skating.”

SafeSport senior investigat­or Libby Bailey told the family in emails and phone calls that she is probing the events surroundin­g the alleged incident. SafeSport spokespers­on Dan Hill said that he and Bailey cannot confirm an active investigat­ion per the organizati­on’s policy.

The girl’s parents provided USA TODAY Sports with a Dec. 30, 2017, email sent from their daughter’s tutor, whose name is not being used to protect the identity of the family, to Dara Bushman, a psychologi­st who worked with their daughter.

“Please ask her to share with you the many statements that have been made to her over the past few weeks ( mostly by John) in an attempt to manipulate or scare her into keeping quiet,” the tutor wrote of the young skater. “She has been told that telling will place a target on her back with French fans, that she is the type of girl who does this ( collect pics), that she has been asking for it by her clothing choices, that her dad is an attorney and imagine what he will do if he finds out, that she will destroy his career and that of his partner, and much more.”

“I received that email,” Bushman said in a phone interview Monday afternoon. “I did what I was bound to do ethically. I contacted the parents. I contacted the authoritie­s. I wanted to make sure the child was safe.”

When the police arrived to interview the girl, she refused to tell them what happened, her parents said. Within a few weeks of the alleged incident, the parents said they took their daughter out of the Tampa- area rink and returned to their home in South Florida. She has been in therapy since, they said. The police took no action after the girl declined to cooperate.

Zimmerman, Fontana and Dispenza are all still coaching at the Wesley Chapel rink, while Cipres still trains at the rink but is performing in skating shows this month in Europe.

On Aug. 10, 2019, a friend of the family reported the allegation to SafeSport after reading three- time U. S. champion and 2014 Olympic team bronze medalist Ashley Wagner’s story of alleged sexual abuse in USA TODAY Sports on Aug. 1.

Wagner’s allegation against former U. S. pairs champion John Coughlin was the latest in a startling series of sexual abuse allegation­s and suspension­s that have rocked figure skating in 2019.

Coughlin, 33, died by suicide Jan. 18, one day after he received an interim suspension from SafeSport. USA TODAY Sports has reported that there were three reports of sexual abuse against Coughlin, two of them involving minors. Coughlin’s death effectively ended the investigat­ion into those reports, SafeSport announced in February. Wagner’s case is separate from those three reports.

Zimmerman, 46, had an illustriou­s career as one of the top U. S. pairs skaters in decades. He and partner Kyoko Ina finished fifth at the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics and also won three U. S. national pairs titles and the 2002 world championsh­ip bronze medal. He and Ina were inducted into the USFS Hall of Fame on January 5, 2018.

Fontana, 43, is a five- time Italian national champion in singles skating.

Cipres, 28, and his pairs partner James have won six French national titles, the 2018 world championsh­ip bronze medal, the 2018 Grand Prix Final and the 2019 European championsh­ip.

 ?? JEAN CATUFFE/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Morgan Cipres, left, is shown with John Zimmerman, far right, and Cipres’ partner, Vanessa James, after completing the free program at the Winter Olympics in 2018.
JEAN CATUFFE/ GETTY IMAGES Morgan Cipres, left, is shown with John Zimmerman, far right, and Cipres’ partner, Vanessa James, after completing the free program at the Winter Olympics in 2018.

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