Raisman says she is victim of MSU doctor Nassar
Six-time Olympic medal-winning
gymnast Aly Raisman said she is also a victim of Larry Nassar, the
former Michigan State University doctor accused of sexually assaulting
more than 100 girls.
Raisman
confirmed the abuse to TV news magazine "60 Minutes," which
will broadcast the interview set to air Sunday, according to USA
Today. The three-time gold medalist and captain of the 2012 and 2016
Olympic teams also describes it in her book, "Fierce," which will
be released next week.
“I am angry. I'm really
upset,” Raisman told "60 Minutes." “I see these young girls that come up
to me, and they ask for pictures or autographs, whatever it is … I just
want to create change so that they never, ever have to go through
this.”
Her disclosure of the attack comes about a
month after her teammate on the so-called "Fierce Five" gymnastics
team, Olympic gold medalist McKayla Maroney she was sexually assaulted by Nassar when she was young.
The “Fierce Five” won gold in London in 2012 and Raisman served as team captain.
Nassar, 54,
a former national gymnastics team doctor, began working with the U.S.
national gymnastics team in 1986. He spent nearly 30 years as an
osteopath with the USA Gymnastics program.
He was first accused of sexual assault in September 2016 when a former Kalamazoo woman, Rachael Denhollander, 32,
filed a police report and told the Indianapolis Star Nassar attacked
her during treatments for a gymnastics injury when she was 15. The
allegation came decades after others made similar accusations that went
nowhere.
Denhollander
is the named plaintiff in the federal civil lawsuit that now includes
more than 125 women. More than 100 other women have filed complaints
with MSU about Nassar.
State authorities have charged Nassar with 22 counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and his trial is set for Dec. 4.
Federal
authorities have charged Nassar with possessing 37,000 images of child
pornography found on external hard drives after he turned in his work
computer to MSU. He pleaded guilty last month in federal court over the
child pornography.
Nassar is being held in jail
without bond on the pornography charges and is scheduled to be sentenced
Nov. 27. He faces life in prison between the federal child pornography
charges he pleaded guilty to and three state felony cases of
first-degree criminal sexual conduct.
In August,
Raisman called for sweeping change in the organization in the wake of
dozens of allegations of sexual abuse by Nassar. Raisman was also a
member of the "Final Five," the national women's team that won gold at
the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.
She called
Nassar “a monster” and blames USA Gymnastics for failing to stop him
and spending too much of the fallout attempting to “sweep it under the
rug.”
"60 Minutes" airs at 7 p.m. Sundays in Detroit on WWJ-TV Channel 62.
cramirez@detroitnews.com
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