Gymnastics Doctor Larry Nassar Gets 40 To 175 Years For Sex Abuse

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After a hearing which featured gut-wrenching statements from 156 of his accusers , former Olympic gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar was sentenced Wednesday to 40 to 175 years in prison for molesting young girls under the guise of treatment.

“You do not deserve to walk outside of a prison ever again,” Judge Rosemarie Aquilina said in the Ingham County, Michigan, courtroom where Nassar was forced to listen to victims for 7 days before learning his fate.

“I signed your death warrant,” she added.Nassar, 54, agreed to a minimum 40-year sentence when he pleaded guilty last year to seven counts of first-degree criminal sexual misconduct in Ingham County.

Nassar still faces sentencing in Eaton County for 3 more counts, and he’s already been sentenced to 60 years in federal prison for possession of child pornography.

The judge could have given him a stiffer sentence than the one he agreed to, but that would have given him the option of withdrawing his plea and then asking for a trial.

Before the sentence was handed down, Nassar was allowed to speak.

Turning to the victims who were sitting behind him, he tearfully said their statements had shaken him to the core.

What I am feeling pales in comparison to [your] pain, trauma and emotional destruction,” he said. “There are no words to describe the depth and breadth of how sorry I am for what has occurred. An acceptable apology to all of you is impossible to write or convey. 

“I will carry your words with me for the rest of my days.”

If Nassar thought the statement would earn him sympathy, it didn’t work.

The judge took out a six-page letter he sent the court last week in which he insisted what he had done to the victims “was medical not sexual,” that he was a “good doctor” and that the victim of a media frenzy, and that prosecutors had pressured him to to admit to things he had not done.

He complained that his patients had turned on him. “‘Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned,'” the judge read aloud, her voice full of scorn.

She asked him, “Would you like to withdraw your plea?

“No, your honor,” he said.

“Because you’re guilty aren’t you?” she pressed.

“I accept my plea,” he said.

Aquilina said that she simply didn’t believe that Nassar was owning up to what he pleaded to: penetrating minors with ungloved hands for his own sexual pleasure.

“I wouldn’t send my dogs to you, sir,” she said.

Nassar was the team doctor for USA Gymnastics for two decades and had a busy sports medicine practice at Michigan State University — and both institutions have been criticized for how they handled allegations against him before they became public.

An investigation by The Indianapolis Star in 2016 first disclosed Nassar had been accused by two former patients of sexually assaulting them under the guise of medical treatments, penetrating them with ungloved hands without their permission.

That allegation unleashed a flood of horrifyingly similar allegations.

Nassar pleaded not guilty to all of the charges and his lawyers insisted his procedures were legitimate, but most of his defenders vanished after the child pornography was found — and he ultimately changed all his pleas.

A year after that, some of the most famous names in gymnastics were added to the list: McKayla Maroney, Aly Raisman and Gabby Douglas from the 2012 “Fierce Five” Olympics team. Simone Biles, who won gold in 2016, said last week that she also had been abused by Nassar, and Jordyn Wieber of the 2012 team revealed her story at the sentencing hearing.

“I feel nauseous even standing in front of you,” 18-year-old Kaylee Lorincz told Nassar, who sat in the witness box crying. “Like the feeling as if I’m being assaulted by you all over again.”

Lorincz, who said that she was 13 when her innocence was stolen, told Nassar she didn’t need an apology. What she and the other victims wanted, she said, was accountability from the institutions that employed him.

“I only hope that when you get a chance to speak, you tell us who knew what and when they knew it,” she said. “If you truly want us to heal, you will do this for us.” 

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