Stamford Advocate

Biles: FBI turned ‘blind eye’ to reports of team doctor’s abuse of gymnasts

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WASHINGTON — Olympic gold medalist Simone Biles told Congress in forceful testimony Wednesday that federal law enforcemen­t and gymnastics officials turned a “blind eye” to USA Gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar’s sexual abuse of her and hundreds of other women.

Biles told the Senate Judiciary Committee that “enough is enough” as she and three other U.S. gymnasts spoke in stark emotional terms about the lasting toll Nassar’s crimes have taken on their lives. In response, FBI Director Christophe­r Wray said he was “deeply and profoundly sorry” for delays in Nassar’s prosecutio­n and the pain it caused.

The four-time Olympic gold medalist and five-time world champion — widely considered to be the greatest gymnast of all time — said that she “can imagine no place that I would be less comfortabl­e right now than sitting here in front of you.“She declared herself a survivor of sexual abuse.

“I blame Larry Nassar and I also blame an entire system that enabled and perpetrate­d his abuse,” Biles said through tears. In addition to failures of the FBI, she said USA Gymnastics and the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee “knew that I was abused by their official team doctor long before I was ever made aware of their knowledge.”

Biles said a message needs to be sent: “If you allow a predator to harm children, the consequenc­es will be swift and severe. Enough is enough.”

The hearing is part of a congressio­nal effort to hold the FBI accountabl­e after multiple missteps in investigat­ing the case, including the delays that allowed the now-imprisoned Nassar to abuse other young gymnasts. At least 40 girls and women said they were molested after the FBI had been made aware of allegation­s against Nassar in 2015.

An internal investigat­ion by the Justice Department released in July said that the FBI made fundamenta­l errors in the probe and did not treat the case with the “utmost seriousnes­s” after USA Gymnastics first reported the allegation­s to the FBI’s field office in Indianapol­is in 2015. The FBI has acknowledg­ed its own conduct was inexcusabl­e.

Wray blasted his own agents who failed to appropriat­ely respond to the complaints and made a promise to the victims that he was committed to “make damn sure everybody at the FBI remembers what happened here“and that it never happens again.

McKayla Maroney, a member of the gold-medal winning U.S. Olympic gymnastics team in 2012, recounted to senators a night when, at age 15, she found the doctor on top of her while she was naked — one of many times she was abused. She said she thought she was going to die that evening. But she said that when she recalled those memories in a call with FBI agents, crying, there was “dead silence.”

Maroney said the FBI “minimized and disregarde­d” her and the other gymnasts as they delayed the probe.

“I think for so long all of us questioned, just because someone else wasn’t fully validating us, that we doubted what happened to us,“Maroney said. “And I think that makes the healing process take longer.”

Biles and Maroney were joined by Aly Raisman, who won gold medals alongside them on the 2012 and 2016 Olympic teams, and gymnast Maggie Nichols. Raisman told the senators that it “disgusts“her that they are still looking for answers six years after the original allegation­s against Nassar were reported.

Raisman noted the traumatic effect the abuse has had on all of them.

“Being here today is taking everything I have,“she said. “My main concern is I hope I have the energy to just walk out of here. I don’t think people realize how much it affects us.”

Nassar pleaded guilty in 2017 to federal child pornograph­y offenses and sexual abuse charges in Michigan. He is now serving decades in prison after hundreds of girls and women said he sexually abused them under the guise of medical treatment.

 ?? Saul Loeb / Associated Press ?? United States Olympic gymnast Simone Biles is sworn in during a Senate Judiciary hearing about the Inspector General’s report on the FBI’s handling of the Larry Nassar investigat­ion on Capitol Hill Wednesday.
Saul Loeb / Associated Press United States Olympic gymnast Simone Biles is sworn in during a Senate Judiciary hearing about the Inspector General’s report on the FBI’s handling of the Larry Nassar investigat­ion on Capitol Hill Wednesday.

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