Raisman Sues OSOC, USA Gymnastics

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Dayton Daily News (Ohio)

 

Aly Raisman spent months urging the U.S. Olympic Committee and USA Gymnastics to get serious about taking a long hard look into how Larry Nassar's abusive conduct was allowed to run unchecked for so long.

Frustrated by what she considers a lack of progress, the six-time Olympic medalist is hoping she can get some answers in court.

Raisman has filed a lawsuit against both organizations, claiming they "knew or should have known" about abusive patterns involving Nassar, the disgraced former national team doctor now in prison for sexually abusing young athletes.

Raisman filed the lawsuit in California on Wednesday. The filing alleges negligence by the USOC and USA Gymnastics for failing to make sure appropriate protocols were followed in regards to monitoring Nassar. Nassar, who is named as a co-defendant in the lawsuit, is serving decades in prison for molesting some of the sport's top athletes and others as well as child pornography crimes.

The 23-year-old Raisman, captain for both the gold-medal winning 2012 and 2016 U.S. women's Olympic gymnastics teams, says she was abused by Nassar beginning in 2010, including at the U.S. national team training facility at the Karolyi Ranch training center in Texas and at the 2012 Olympics in London. Raisman said she initially felt she was receiving medically necessary treatment by Nassar before realizing it was abuse. She battled shame, guilt and depression in the aftermath, Raisman said.

Nassar spent nearly three decades at USA Gymnastics before being fired in 2015 after complaints about his behavior. He continued to work at Michigan State University through the fall of 2016 before being hit with federal charges. Raisman said the USOC and USA Gymnastics allowed Nassar to continue abusing athletes by not telling the university about the conduct that led them to fire him.

USA Gymnastics and the USOC broke their stated mandates to protect children in their programs by not revealing Nassar's past misconduct to athletes and their parents or guardians, the lawsuit said.

Raisman's suit joins a list of more than 100 civil actions filed against Nassar and USA Gymnastics. McKayla Maroney, an Olympic teammate of Raisman's in 2012, named the USOC as a co-defendant in a lawsuit she filed last December.

Raisman filed her lawsuit the same day as hundreds of women and girls and a current University of Michigan male gymnast filed a federal lawsuit against Michigan State University, USA Gymnastics and others. The plaintiffs in the federal suit include Jacob Moore, a freshman at Michigan. Moore says he was treated by Nassar multiple times and described an incident in which Nassar administered acupuncture in and around Moore's genitalia after pulling down Moore's pants in front of a female gymnast who was a minor.

USA Gymnastics said in a statement Friday it is "doing everything we can to prevent this from happening again by making bold decisions and holding ourselves to the highest standards of care." The USOC did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Raisman, who has become a vocal critic of both organizations after initially revealing the abuse in her autobiography released last fall, did not plan to go to court but says she felt compelled to press forward because she believes USA Gymnastics and the USOC are not making a sincere effort to "properly address the problem."

"I refuse to wait any longer for these organizations to do the right thing," Raisman said in a statement. "It is my hope that the legal process will hold them accountable and enable the change that is so desperately needed."

The USOC is conducting an independent review of when former CEO Scott Black-mun and others learned the details about abuse cases at USA Gymnastics and whether they responded appropriately.

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March 3, 2018
 
 
 

 

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