Supported by
The Larry Nassar Case and What Comes Next
Lawrence G. Nassar, the former physician for the American gymnastics team, was sentenced on Wednesday to 40 to 175 years in prison for sex crimes.
It capped more than a week of victim impact statements by young women and teenagers who described how, as aspiring athletes, they were sent to Dr. Nassar at gymnastics camps, gyms, his home and the Michigan State University clinic.
Olympic athletes were among those who spoke at the hearing about their abuse. Here is a look at coverage by The New York Times.

The story came to light in 2016
The story of abuse in the gymnastics world surfaced publicly in 2016 in a series of investigative reports by The Indianapolis Star. Read about the newspaper’s role in the case here.
The Star first reported that U.S.A. Gymnastics, the sport’s governing body, had kept files of complaints involving more than 50 coaches suspected of abusing athletes. In many cases, the newspaper reported, officials had failed to alert law enforcement of possible wrongdoing. Read that story here.
In September 2016, the newspaper interviewed two former gymnasts — one an Olympic medalist, later identified as Jamie Dantzscher — who accused Dr. Nassar specifically of sexual abuse when they were children. One, Rachael Denhollander, now 33, agreed to be named. Read that story here.
The Times profiled Ms. Denhollander this week when she became the last woman — the 156th over the course of seven days — to make a statement at Dr. Nassar’s sentencing.
The courtroom and the victim impact statements
But the “culture of abuse” in the gymnastics world did not generate the kind of outrage seen after other abuse cases in sports, such as when former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky was accused in 2012 of sexually abusing young boys. Thursday’s edition of the #MeToo newsletter explores that comparison.
Dr. Nassar, 54, was accused of molesting girls for decades under the guise of giving them examinations or medical treatment. He also treated athletes as a team physician at Twistars Gymnastics Club USA in Michigan.
Michigan’s Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs suspended Dr. Nassar’s medical license in January 2017.
He pleaded guilty to 10 molestation charges in November: seven in Ingham County, Mich., and three in neighboring Eaton County. He was also sentenced to 60 years in prison in a separate case on charges that stemmed from more than 37,000 images and videos of child pornography found on his computer. He is expected to spend the rest of his life in prison.
More than 150 victims directly addressed him as he sat across from them in the Ingham County courtroom. They were elite gymnasts, runners, divers, swimmers and other athletes. Dr. Nassar told the judge in a letter that it was difficult for him to hear their statements.

Their voices were heard
The Times compiled the statements of his victims in their own words here, and collected some of their remarks on video. They were also featured on Thursday’s episode of The Daily.
Among them were elite gymnasts like McKayla Maroney, Jordyn Wieber and Aly Raisman, the captain of the teams that took home gold medals for the United States at the 2012 London and 2016 Rio Summer Olympics.
Read Ms. Raisman’s complete statement from the hearing in Michigan here.
Many of the young women who spoke were accompanied by their parents, who said they were often in the same room as Dr. Nassar surreptitiously abused their children, and expressed guilt that they did not see the red flags. Across the country, parents wondered how — or whether — to discuss his crimes with their children.
Judge Rosemarie Aquilina emerged as an unusually fierce advocate for the victims. This video explored how she encouraged other women to come forward by opening her courtroom to those wanting to speak.
What is the impact on the sports world?
There have been complaints that the organizations and people who could have stopped Dr. Nassar sooner did not act quickly. But as the young women were testifying, events began to move swiftly.
On Monday, U.S.A. Gymnastics announced that several of its board members had resigned: the chairman, Paul Parilla; the vice chairman, Jay Binder; and the board’s treasurer, Bitsy Kelley.
On Tuesday, the N.C.A.A. opened a formal investigation into how the university handled Dr. Nassar’s case.
And on Wednesday, Lou Anna K. Simon, the M.S.U. president, resigned under pressure over the way she had handled the scandal. With Dr. Nassar behind bars, state and federal agencies have turned their focus to what the university knew and when.
U.S.A. Gymnastics also cut ties with the private training center in Texas owned by Bela and Martha Karolyi, where some of the abuse occurred. Simone Biles, one of the most decorated gymnasts in history, had said she dreaded training at the ranch. The Times wrote about the ranch’s connection to the Olympic dreams of many young gymnasts here.
AT&T, Procter & Gamble, Hershey’s, Under Armour and Kellogg’s had already declined to renew or ended their sponsorships of U.S.A. Gymnastics, as this Times Op-Ed noted in summing up the reckoning, or lack of it, in the sport after the abuse became known.
Maggie Astor contributed reporting.
Advertisement