USA TODAY US Edition

Lopez cannot be allowed to compete

Taekwondo star shouldn’t be representi­ng United States amid sexual assault allegation­s

- Christine Brennan cbrennan@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

On Saturday, Steven Lopez, Olympic gold medalist and alleged sexual predator, will board a plane to South Korea to represent the United States at the taekwondo world championsh­ips. Someone needs to stop him. Lopez, 38, and his brother Jean, 43, members of what often is called the “First Family of Taekwondo,” have been accused of sexual assault by four women, according to a recent USA TODAY Sports report. The brothers denied the allegation­s in interviews last week.

Even though USA Taekwondo, the national governing body for the sport in the United States, was investigat­ing the brothers last year, they were allowed to participat­e in the 2016 Rio Olympic Games. The investigat­ions are continuing. The allegation­s have since drawn the attention of the FBI.

It is time for someone to step in. The U.S. Center for SafeSport, which became fully operationa­l in March, was designed for just this purpose. So far, it shockingly has done nothing publicly except to say it can’t comment.

The U.S. Olympic Committee created SafeSport to try to show how serious it is about sexual as- sault after scandals over the past decade involving USA Gymnastics, USA Swimming and US Speedskati­ng. Yet it allowed both Lopez brothers to go to Rio even after being consulted by USA Taekwondo about the allegation­s.

The USOC said in a statement last week that it takes “preventing and responding to sexual abuse ... incredibly seriously.” Yet it has done nothing, not even commenting about sending the two men to Rio.

USA Taekwondo says it

“places tremendous importance on protecting and preserving the safety of our athletes.” Yet it failed to hold a hearing about the Lopezes, which is the least that should been done before they were allowed the privilege of representi­ng their country at another Olympics.

The World Taekwondo Federation called the allegation­s “very, very serious,” but said “it is too early to take a position.”

You get the idea. Everyone is very concerned. Yet no one is stopping Steven Lopez from going to the world championsh­ips, where he will be on a 16-person U.S. team, including three women who are still teenagers.

This is an appalling derelictio­n of duty by the people who have been given the great responsibi­lity of running our nation’s Olympic program and protecting the children and young adults who are a part of it.

How can they possibly look at the USA TODAY Sports report and not step in immediatel­y?

With the creation of SafeSport, they’ve given themselves the wherewitha­l to do just that. Within the organizati­on’s rules, there is this:

“Interim measures may also be appropriat­e where an allegation against the Responding Party is sufficient­ly serious that the Responding Party’s continued participat­ion could be detrimenta­l to sport or its reputation. Nothing in these Procedures prevents … taking appropriat­e interim mea- sures upon notice of an imminent threat of harm.”

Those interim measures include “altering training schedules, providing chaperones, implementi­ng contact limitation­s between the parties, and suspension­s.”

Of course, Steven and Jean Lopez are innocent until proven guilty. And they have the right to defend themselves in this process. But with such troubling informatio­n available to them, Olympic authoritie­s must err on the side of caution. They cannot let Steven Lopez get on that plane.

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 ?? ROBERT HANASHIRO, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Five-time taekwondo Olympian Steven Lopez has denied allegation­s that he sexually assaulted women.
ROBERT HANASHIRO, USA TODAY SPORTS Five-time taekwondo Olympian Steven Lopez has denied allegation­s that he sexually assaulted women.

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