Wapakoneta Daily News

Olympics coach commits suicide after charges

- By ANNA LIZ NICHOLS and ED WHITE

LANSING, Mich. (AP) — A former U.S. Olympics gymnastics coach with ties to disgraced sport doctor Larry Nassar died by suicide Thursday after being charged with two dozen crimes, including forms of human traffickin­g, the state attorney general said.

The announceme­nt from Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel came about three hours after a news conference where Nessel announced that John Geddert was charged with crimes, including sexual assault, human traffickin­g and running a criminal enterprise. The charges were the latest fallout from the sexual abuse scandal involving Nassar, a former Michigan State University sports doctor.

Nessel said at a news conference that it was her understand­ing he had turned himself in to law enforcemen­t and would appear at a court arraignmen­t about an hour later. The arraignmen­t never happened.

A former U.S. Olympics gymnastics coach with ties to disgraced sports doctor Larry Nassar was charged Thursday with turning his Michigan gym into a yearslong criminal enterprise by coercing girls to train under him and then verbally and physically abusing them.

John Geddert was charged with two dozen crimes, including forms of human traffickin­g, a step that prosecutor­s acknowledg­ed was an uncommon use of Michigan law.

He’s also accused of lying to investigat­ors in 2016 when he denied ever hearing complaints about Nassar, who is serving decades in prison for sexually assaulting female athletes in a scandal that counted hundreds of victims and turned USA Gymnastics upside down.

Geddert, 63, was head coach of the 2012 U.S. women’s Olympic gymnastics team, which won a gold medal. He has long been associated with Nassar, who was the Olympic team’s doctor and also treated injured gymnasts at Twistars, Geddert’s Lansing-area gym.

Geddert is accused of recruiting minors for forced labor, a reference to the gymnasts he coached, according to documents filed in an Eaton County court.

Attorney General Dana Nessel said the coach used “force, fraud and coercion” for financial benefit.

“The victims suffer from disordered eating,” Nessel said, “including bulimia and anorexia, suicide attempts and attempts at self harm, excessive physical conditioni­ng, repeatedly being forced to perform even when injured, extreme emotional abuse and physical abuse, including sexual assault.

“Many of these victims still carry these scars from this behavior to this day,” the attorney general said.

The charges against Geddert include two counts of sexual assault against a teen in 2012.

Nessel acknowledg­ed that the case might not fit the common understand­ing of human traffickin­g.

“We think of it predominan­tly as affecting people of color or those without means to protect themselves ... but honestly it can happen to anyone, anywhere,” she said. “Young impression­able women may at times be vulnerable and open to traffickin­g crimes, regardless of their stature in the community or the financial well-being of their families.”

Assistant Attorney General Danielle Hagaman-clark said the charges against Geddert “have very little to do” with Nassar.

Geddert was suspended by Indianapol­is-based USA Gymnastics. On his Linkedin page, Geddert described himself as the “most decorated women’s gymnastics coach in Michigan gymnastics history.” He said his Twistars teams won 130 club championsh­ips.

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