The sports scandal NO ONE is talking about Doctor Molests 81 Olympic Gymnasts Over 25 YEARS!

geechiedan

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
81 Have Accused Doctor To Olympic Gymnasts Of Sexual Assault

Today, the state of Michigan filed a slew of criminal charges spread across two counties against disgraced former gymnastics doctor* Larry Nassar, saying he sexually abused nine gymnasts when they came to him for treatment. In the affidavits for the charges, investigators outline how multiple gymnasts said Nassar would penetrate their vaginas with his fingers for extended periods of time under the guise of giving them medical treatment, like a massage. One victim told authorities the assaults started when she was 10 years old; another said she was assaulted by Nassar “more times than she could count,” according to one affidavit. A third victim said in a second affidavit that she believed that Nassar “twisted treatment into having parents watch their children get molested.”


Between the two affidavits released today, police and state prosecutors say they have heard from 81 people who say they were victims of Nassar. The charges filed today—including 22 counts of criminal sexual conduct in Ingham and Eaton counties—are based on what happened with nine victims. In the Ingham cases, the affidavit says that all the victims were sexually abused by Nassar “while he treated them at either the MSU Sports medicine clinic office or after-hours at his home in Holt, Michigan.” In the Eaton cases, the affidavit says the victims were abused by Nassar while they were gymnasts at Twistars Gymnastics Club in Dimondale, Mich. These are the first criminal charges directly related to Nassar’s role as a doctor, according to the Lansing State Journal.

http://deadspin.com/police-81-have-accused-doctor-to-olympic-gymnasts-of-s-1792652315



Three former members of the U.S. women's national gymnastics team say they were sexually abused by the longtime doctor for the sport's governing body.

On CBS's 60 Minutes on Sunday, Jamie Dantzscher, Jeannette Antolin and Jessica Howard alleged that Dr. Larry Nassar began abusing them as teenagers in the 1990s. In each case, the women say Nassar told them that he was performing medical procedures to improve their health and address their medical problems. As part of this, the women said, Nassar inserted ungloved fingers in their vagina or rectum on repeated occasions and for lengthy periods of time.


"He would put his fingers inside of me and move my leg around," Dantzscher told 60 Minutes. "He would tell me I was going to feel a pop. And that that would put my hips back and help my back pain."

The women, all minors when the alleged abuse began, recalled being conflicted over what they felt was happening and the sense that they should trust a doctor charged with their care.

“I remember being uncomfortable because of the area,” said Antolin, who was on the national team from 1995 to 2000 and competed at the 1999 world championships. “But in my mind, I was like, If this helps, I’ll do anything. It was treatment. You don’t complain about treatment.”


The three women are the most prominent gymnasts to accuse Nassar of abuse. Dozens of others, including students at Michigan State University (MSU), where Nassar was a doctor for a number of sports teams, have made similar allegations. On Feb. 17, a judge ruled that Nassar will stand trial in Michigan on three sexual-assault charges stemming from incidents at his home in the early 2000s. The alleged victim in that case was the daughter of a family friend.

Nassar has also been charged with the federal crime of possessing child pornography. Last December, he was held without bond when FBI agents investigating the abuse charges from gymnasts and students found 37,000 child pornography images and videos at his home, some of which he had stored on computer hard drives that he attempted to throw out in a trash bin. The FBI also has Go Pro video of Nassar allegedly molesting girls in a pool.


Nassar is licensed in the state of Michigan to practice osteopathic medicine. He pleaded not guilty to the charges filed against him in Michigan, and maintains that the procedures he performed on the gymnasts were legitimate.

While rare, practitioners occasionally use intra-vaginal techniques to relieve pain. But the therapist is expected to wear surgical gloves in all circumstances and have a chaperone present if the patient is a minor. The gymnasts say they were often alone with Nassar and he did not wear gloves.

Nassar was the team doctor for USA Gymnastics from 1996 to 2015 and served as team physician for several sports at MSU from the 1990s to 2015. The doctor also served as a physician for Twistars, a Michigan gymnastics center.

In January, 18 more people, some of them still minors, filed suit against Nassar over the alleged abuse.

John Manly, the lawyer for the three gymnasts and many other alleged victims, says his clients have reported abuse by Nassar beginning as far back as 1996. It was nearly a decade later before MSU or USA Gymnastics conducted their own probes into Nassar's conduct.

MSU investigated charges filed against Nassar by a recent graduate in 2014, but did not find evidence of misconduct. USA Gymnastics said in a statement that it wasn’t made aware of the allegations against Nassar until June 2015. When USA Gymnastics first received a report of “an athlete’s concern” from a coach, the organization notified the FBI.

Neither MSU nor USA Gymnastics notified each other of their investigations. USA Gymnastics fired Nassar in July 2015; MSU terminated him several months later.

The charges against Nassar highlight a dark side of competitive sports, where adults in positions of power can exploit the vulnerability of their young, eager charges. The three former gymnasts say their sport was particularly ripe for abuse. For elite gymnasts, participating in USA Gymnastics programs is the only route to making the world championship and Olympic teams, which means the organization's authority figures have tremendous influence over an athlete's career.

As the national team physician, Nassar was present at the training camps held outside of Houston at the home and gym of the prominent national team coordinators Bela and Martha Karolyi. For an elite young gymnast, an invitation to one of those monthly camps was coveted.

Howard, who saw Nassar at the ranch for hip problems, said on 60 Minutesthat she interpreted her time with the doctor as a sign of her potential as an athlete. “I was lucky to be at the ranch working with him,” she said.

The gymnasts said they talked about their experiences with each other, but all felt that they had no choice but to continue. “The girls would say ‘Yeah he touches you funny,’” Howard, a three-time rhythmic gymnastics national champion, said. “He started massaging me. And he had asked me not to wear any underwear. And then he continued to go into more and more intimate places. I remember thinking something was off but I didn’t feel like I was able to say anything because he was, you know, this very high-profile doctor.”

In a written statement, USA Gymnastics board chairman Paul Parilla and CEO Steve Penny said: “Regarding Dr. Larry Nassar, USA Gymnastics is appalled that anyone would exploit a young athlete or child in the manner alleged. When USA Gymnastics first learned of athlete concerns regarding Dr. Nassar in the summer of 2015, the organization acted without hesitation.”

But as testimony by USA Gymnastics officials in other cases of sexual abuse by coaches revealed, the organization apparently had a policy of not acting on abuse allegations unless a complaint was reported by a victim or the victim’s parent. As an investigation conducted by the Indianapolis Star revealed, that meant coaches who had been fired for suspected sexual misconduct could easily be hired by another training facility.

USA Gymnastics has hired an independent reviewer to investigate its policies and procedures regarding reports of sexual abuse. The organization says it will consider modifying its practices depending on the results of the review, which is due later this year.

http://time.com/4675589/gymnastics-sex-abuse-nassar/

That means that chances are at least a few of these girls from each of the olympic teams has probably been molested during training....

Team-USA-Womens-Gymnastics.jpg


article-2185711-1473B4F1000005DC-760_634x356.jpg


magnificent-seven_olympic-trials_gettyimages-51585899.jpg


YET NO ONE HAS ASKED THEM ANYTHING.... NOW WATCH ABOUT 20 YEARS FROM NOW ALY RAISMAN OR SIMONE BILES WILL COME OUT AND SAY SOMETHING HAPPENED..
 
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Couldn't be satisfied with getting a glimpse. :smh: I was staying at a hotel that had a college gymnastics tournament going on. Tons of them walking around in the one piece. :rise:
 
Glimpsing and being with of age pro and college gymnasts are one thing...molesting girls (and in this case, pro could mean 16 & 17) and women is another thing.

I would think there would've been some mothers in the room when their daughter was being molested or or mothers/fathers that would've heard about the treatment and they didn't do anything bc of "the fame of the doctor:eek:." How many others covered up for this guy?
 
US Gymnastics is too big to fail. Its a premier sport in the Olympics and garners much attention which means $$$$....if a sex assualt/molestation scandal broke concerning the biggest if not ONLY premier coaching and training facilities in the sport it would kill it. Not only is the media culpable but the athletes themselves...again.. this shit has been going on since at least the 90s and NO ONE IS ASKING DOMINIQUE DAWES, KERRI STRUG, NASTIA LIUKIN, JORDYN WIEBER or ANY of those high profile athletes over the last 25 YEARS a thing about it.
 
Raisman: scandal marred USA Gymnastics needs sweeping change
201708191803649855624

Aly Raisman is ready to talk about "the elephant in the room." And the six-time Olympic medal winning gymnast thinks it's time USA Gymnastics joins in a conversation she feels is long overdue.


The 23-year-old is calling for sweeping change in the organization in the wake of dozens of allegations of sexual abuse by former national team doctor Larry Nassar, a scandal that has left one of the U.S. Olympic movement's marquee programs scrambling and Raisman shaken.

Larry Nassar spent nearly 30 years as an osteopath with the USA Gymnastics program and is now in prison in Michigan after pleading guilty to possession of child pornography. Nassar is still awaiting trial on separate criminal sexual conduct charges in addition to being sued by over 125 women in civil court who claim he sexually assaulted them under the guise of treatment.

Nassar has pleaded not guilty to the assault charges and the dozens of civil suits filed in Michigan are currently in mediation .

Raisman, who was around Nassar regularly at the team's training facility in Texas and at meets around the globe, declined to talk about whether she was treated improperly by Nassar. She did agree to speak more generally and 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."

"I feel like there's a lot of articles about it, but nobody has said, 'This is horrible, this is what we're doing to change,'" Raisman said in a wide-ranging interview Saturday shortly after she and other members of the "Final Five" that won team gold at the 2016 Olympics were inducted into the USA Gymnastics Hall of Fame.

Raisman served as a captain for both the "Final Five" and the "Fierce Five" that won gold in London in 2012. While several alleged Nassar victims have come forward, including 2000 Olympic bronze medalist Jamie Dantzscher, Raisman is the highest profile athlete yet to publicly reprimand the organization. Raisman said she kept quiet waiting after the initial allegations surfaced last summer, waiting for USA Gymnastics to own up to its mistakes.

While it is taking steps toward creating a safer environment for its athletes, she doesn't believe it is doing nearly enough openly enough, adding she feels USA Gymnastics is trying to get on with business as usual.

"What people don't realize is that this doctor was a doctor for 29 years," Raisman. "Whether or not he did it to a gymnast, they still knew him. Even if he didn't do it to you, it's still the trauma and the anxiety of wondering what could have happened. I think that needs to be addressed. These girls, they should be comfortable going to USA Gymnastics and saying 'I need help, I want therapy. I need this.'

USA Gymnastics launched an independent review of its policies in the wake of the allegations against Nassar and reporting by the Indianapolis Star that highlighted chronic mishandling of abuse allegations against coaches and staff at some of its over 3,500 clubs across the country.


http://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/mor...s-needs-sweeping-change/ar-AAqlnRh?li=BBnb7Kz
 
That means that chances are at least a few of these girls from each of the olympic teams has probably been molested during training....

Team-USA-Womens-Gymnastics.jpg


article-2185711-1473B4F1000005DC-760_634x356.jpg


magnificent-seven_olympic-trials_gettyimages-51585899.jpg





YET NO ONE HAS ASKED THEM ANYTHING.... NOW WATCH ABOUT 20 YEARS FROM NOW ALY RAISMAN OR SIMONE BILES WILL COME OUT AND SAY SOMETHING HAPPENED..

booom

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'It Started When I Was 13 Years Old.' Olympic Gymnast McKayla Maroney Says U.S. Team Doctor Molested Her


Olympic gold medal-winning U.S. Gymnast McKayla Maroney has alleged she was molested by a former USA Gymnastics team doctor, adding her voice to the #MeToo movement where people are sharing experiences of sexual harassment and assault and becoming the most prominent athlete to go public with her claims against the physician.

In a statement posted to Twitter, Maroney, 21, alleged she was molested for years by former USA Gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar, who is currently awaiting sentencing after pleading guilty to federal child pornography charges. “People should know that this is not just happening in Hollywood,” she wrote, in reference to the allegations about producer Harvey Weinstein.


“It started when I was 13 years old, and it didn’t end until I left the sport,” Maroney continued. “I had a dream to go to the Olympics, and the things that I had to endure to get there were unnecessary and disgusting.” Maroney ended her involvement with the sport in 2016.

http://time.com/4987066/mckayla-maroney-metoo-molested/
 
if they knew they were sexually assaulted the first time......why keep going back 10 more times, knowing that u will be sexually assaulted again???
shit is crazy
 
While rare, practitioners occasionally use intra-vaginal techniques to relieve pain. But the therapist is expected to wear surgical gloves in all circumstances and have a chaperone present if the patient is a minor.

wait did I just read he actually molested a girl in front of their parents...... da fuck?

Parents probably would try to cover for him saying"he was just using that "introvaginal technique" :rolleyes:
 
US Gymnastics is too big to fail. Its a premier sport in the Olympics and garners much attention which means $$$$....if a sex assualt/molestation scandal broke concerning the biggest if not ONLY premier coaching and training facilities in the sport it would kill it. Not only is the media culpable but the athletes themselves...again.. this shit has been going on since at least the 90s and NO ONE IS ASKING DOMINIQUE DAWES, KERRI STRUG, NASTIA LIUKIN, JORDYN WIEBER or ANY of those high profile athletes over the last 25 YEARS a thing about it.


Good post
 
How could the parents think this was therapy? Gotta be like the money was blinding them, but what about the girls that never made it? He fingered them as well?
 
wait did I just read he actually molested a girl in front of their parents...... da fuck?

some of yall muthafuckas trust these doctors too god damn much...

this dude should be under a jail somewhere for decades but watch the bullshit sentence he gets..

Man, you don't know the half of it. Last year, the AJC did an investigative series which died a quick death too.

Think any of these sick cacs got arrested? Prosecuted? Or are they still practicing?

Doc-patient-in-exam-room-lead-3.jpg

ILLUSTRATIONS BY RICHARD WATKINS / AJC

License to betray: A broken system forgives doctors in every state

How common is doctor sex abuse?

Journalist's discovery in Georgia sparked AJC's national investigation

VIDEO: When a system is broken, 'I can't trust those in power'

VIDEO: Atlanta Journal-Constitution editor Kevin Riley talks about this project

Repeat Ga. offender still licensed to treat patients
VIDEO: Despite problems over 3 decades, doctor still practicing in Metro Atlanta

Reputation no indicator of likelihood to offend
High-profile doctors who sexually abused their patients

Here are the excuses offered by doctors caught in the act

VIDEO: Actual excuses from the records

Profession condemns abuse, but resists solutions
Not a new problem: Earlier coverage of doctor sexual abuse

VIDEO: The lasting impact sexual abuse has on victims

Dangerous doctors, flawed data
Fact-checking the National Practitioner Data Bank

Repeat offenders often targeted vulnerable patients

VIDEO: How the AJC got hard-to-find information on problems with doctors

Cases and stories from across the nation
In Texas, 17 patients claim abuse, but doctor still practices

How a small town brought sex-abusing doctor to justice

VIDEO: Winning 'detective lottery' in a small Ohio town

A radio show’s discussion leads to arrest of DeKalb Co. pediatrician

How an undercover GBI agent posed as a patient to catch abusive doctor

VIDEO: Former undercover agent talks about how she helped nab sexually abusive doctor

VIDEO: How a radio show led to pediatrician’s arrest

Resources for patients
What are safe protocols for full physical exams?

During breast exams, what are the proper protocols?

Patients may find it difficult to learn if their doctor has been accused

If you have been sexually abused by your doctor, here's what you should know


Patients violated, doctors rehabilitated: Abusers go to therapy, return to practice
Yoga, time with horses among therapies for doctors who violated patients

6 ways sexually abusive doctors may be restricted when they return to practice

Ga. doctor is leading advocate for rehabilitation.

No report, no justice: Doctors slip through cracks as regulators fail to notify police
Some doctors still practice after being arrested

Psychiatrist manipulated women into sex with tales of witchcraft

VIDEO: Woman abused by Kentucky doctor comes forward, and others follow


System shields abusive doctors nationwide, leaving patients in the dark about troubled past
From kidnapper to doctor: Patients unaware of physician’s notorious crime



Gaps, cloaks and barriers: Why it’s so difficult to learn about your doctor's tarnished record
VIDEO: Gynecologist with Piedmont Healthcare answers questions about what should happen in an exam room


We grade every state on how well it protects patients
State-by-state analysis shows faulty framework, dangerous gaps

Convicted Georgia doctor goes to prison, but now is allowed to practice again
VIDEO: ʻPimp with a prescription pad’: The story of Dr. Dekle


In their own words: 6 women, 6 stories of pain
Prestige protects even the most abusive doctors
’A stuporous nightmare’: Abused and sterilized by her doctor

Atlantan says the hospital believed its doctor instead of his victims

AJC Doctors & Sex Abuse investigation sparks improved patient protection

VIDEO: ʻA voice for the victims’: Atlanta woman’s battle in Wisconsin


UPDATES AND NEWS
Dec. 28: Some moms accusing doctor of groping say he violated kids, too

Oct. 19: Sex abuse allegations: Can you believe these women?

Oct. 3: Multiple rape charges not enough to stop doctor from practicing

Sept. 30: Doctor told police his patients were witches, years before alleged sex abuse

Oct. 5: Meeting a doctor who kidnapped a college kid

Sept.1: Atlanta doctor accused of molesting a boy 32 years ago in Boston

Aug. 29: If they weren’t doctors, some sex abusers might be facing police

July 19: Georgia medical board to review sexual misconduct cases

July 12: Reaction to series: Change needed now

July 8: More on why numbers can’t tell the whole story

July 6: Parallels between church scandal and doctors sex-abuse investigation

July 6: AJC investigation featured on ‘Good Morning America’

FROM OTHER NEWS ORGANIZATIONS
Records reveal hospital debate over sexual misconduct allegations

Miss. board to study whether legislation is needed to strengthen patient protection

Illinois regulators say psychiatrist sexually abused patients, overprescribed drugs

$1 million bond set for ex-USA Gymnastics doctor accused of sexual assault

Oregon doctor with history of complaints charged with sexually abusing two patients

Connecticut physician is charged with sexual assault of a male patient

West Virginia physician charged with sexual abuse of minor

Pediatrician in Pa. arrested on child pornography charges

Ala. doctor, 81, facing sexual abuse, child pornography charges

Suspended Pa. doctor takes plea deal in child sex abuse case

How Texas failed to protect boys from a doctor at a state facility

North Georgia doctor sexually abused patients, but still practicing

Florida allows doctors accused of sex abuse to keep working

Flaws in Ohio system allow disciplined doctors to keep practicing

Dayton physician exposed his genitals to children, others for years

DOCTORS & SEX ABUSE
Last year an AJC investigative reporter detected something alarming about the way Georgia treats doctors who have been disciplined for sexual misconduct with their patients: Two-thirds were permitted to practice again.

Our findings made us wonder whether our state is unusual. We expanded our scope to the rest of the country, and analyzed more than 100,000 medical board orders relating to disciplinary action against doctors since 1999.

We found disturbing news: Georgia isn’t unusual – sexual abuse of patients by doctors occurs far more often than any of us would have expected. Moreover it is shrouded by a system that too often protects doctors from accountability, leaving patients vulnerable.

We uncovered these problems after many months of investigative reporting. Doctors & Sex Abuse is a multimedia project that shares what we’ve learned. Our goal for this project is that it will lead to solutions that benefit the public.


http://doctors.ajc.com/table_of_contents/
 
Man, you don't know the half of it. Last year, the AJC did an investigative series which died a quick death too.

Think any of these sick cacs got arrested? Prosecuted? Or are they still practicing?

Doc-patient-in-exam-room-lead-3.jpg

ILLUSTRATIONS BY RICHARD WATKINS / AJC

License to betray: A broken system forgives doctors in every state

How common is doctor sex abuse?

Journalist's discovery in Georgia sparked AJC's national investigation

VIDEO: When a system is broken, 'I can't trust those in power'

VIDEO: Atlanta Journal-Constitution editor Kevin Riley talks about this project

Repeat Ga. offender still licensed to treat patients
VIDEO: Despite problems over 3 decades, doctor still practicing in Metro Atlanta

Reputation no indicator of likelihood to offend
High-profile doctors who sexually abused their patients

Here are the excuses offered by doctors caught in the act

VIDEO: Actual excuses from the records

Profession condemns abuse, but resists solutions
Not a new problem: Earlier coverage of doctor sexual abuse

VIDEO: The lasting impact sexual abuse has on victims

Dangerous doctors, flawed data
Fact-checking the National Practitioner Data Bank

Repeat offenders often targeted vulnerable patients

VIDEO: How the AJC got hard-to-find information on problems with doctors

Cases and stories from across the nation
In Texas, 17 patients claim abuse, but doctor still practices

How a small town brought sex-abusing doctor to justice

VIDEO: Winning 'detective lottery' in a small Ohio town

A radio show’s discussion leads to arrest of DeKalb Co. pediatrician

How an undercover GBI agent posed as a patient to catch abusive doctor

VIDEO: Former undercover agent talks about how she helped nab sexually abusive doctor

VIDEO: How a radio show led to pediatrician’s arrest

Resources for patients
What are safe protocols for full physical exams?

During breast exams, what are the proper protocols?

Patients may find it difficult to learn if their doctor has been accused

If you have been sexually abused by your doctor, here's what you should know


Patients violated, doctors rehabilitated: Abusers go to therapy, return to practice
Yoga, time with horses among therapies for doctors who violated patients

6 ways sexually abusive doctors may be restricted when they return to practice

Ga. doctor is leading advocate for rehabilitation.

No report, no justice: Doctors slip through cracks as regulators fail to notify police
Some doctors still practice after being arrested

Psychiatrist manipulated women into sex with tales of witchcraft

VIDEO: Woman abused by Kentucky doctor comes forward, and others follow


System shields abusive doctors nationwide, leaving patients in the dark about troubled past
From kidnapper to doctor: Patients unaware of physician’s notorious crime



Gaps, cloaks and barriers: Why it’s so difficult to learn about your doctor's tarnished record
VIDEO: Gynecologist with Piedmont Healthcare answers questions about what should happen in an exam room


We grade every state on how well it protects patients
State-by-state analysis shows faulty framework, dangerous gaps

Convicted Georgia doctor goes to prison, but now is allowed to practice again
VIDEO: ʻPimp with a prescription pad’: The story of Dr. Dekle


In their own words: 6 women, 6 stories of pain
Prestige protects even the most abusive doctors
’A stuporous nightmare’: Abused and sterilized by her doctor

Atlantan says the hospital believed its doctor instead of his victims

AJC Doctors & Sex Abuse investigation sparks improved patient protection

VIDEO: ʻA voice for the victims’: Atlanta woman’s battle in Wisconsin


UPDATES AND NEWS
Dec. 28: Some moms accusing doctor of groping say he violated kids, too

Oct. 19: Sex abuse allegations: Can you believe these women?

Oct. 3: Multiple rape charges not enough to stop doctor from practicing

Sept. 30: Doctor told police his patients were witches, years before alleged sex abuse

Oct. 5: Meeting a doctor who kidnapped a college kid

Sept.1: Atlanta doctor accused of molesting a boy 32 years ago in Boston

Aug. 29: If they weren’t doctors, some sex abusers might be facing police

July 19: Georgia medical board to review sexual misconduct cases

July 12: Reaction to series: Change needed now

July 8: More on why numbers can’t tell the whole story

July 6: Parallels between church scandal and doctors sex-abuse investigation

July 6: AJC investigation featured on ‘Good Morning America’

FROM OTHER NEWS ORGANIZATIONS
Records reveal hospital debate over sexual misconduct allegations

Miss. board to study whether legislation is needed to strengthen patient protection

Illinois regulators say psychiatrist sexually abused patients, overprescribed drugs

$1 million bond set for ex-USA Gymnastics doctor accused of sexual assault

Oregon doctor with history of complaints charged with sexually abusing two patients

Connecticut physician is charged with sexual assault of a male patient

West Virginia physician charged with sexual abuse of minor

Pediatrician in Pa. arrested on child pornography charges

Ala. doctor, 81, facing sexual abuse, child pornography charges

Suspended Pa. doctor takes plea deal in child sex abuse case

How Texas failed to protect boys from a doctor at a state facility

North Georgia doctor sexually abused patients, but still practicing

Florida allows doctors accused of sex abuse to keep working

Flaws in Ohio system allow disciplined doctors to keep practicing

Dayton physician exposed his genitals to children, others for years

DOCTORS & SEX ABUSE
Last year an AJC investigative reporter detected something alarming about the way Georgia treats doctors who have been disciplined for sexual misconduct with their patients: Two-thirds were permitted to practice again.

Our findings made us wonder whether our state is unusual. We expanded our scope to the rest of the country, and analyzed more than 100,000 medical board orders relating to disciplinary action against doctors since 1999.

We found disturbing news: Georgia isn’t unusual – sexual abuse of patients by doctors occurs far more often than any of us would have expected. Moreover it is shrouded by a system that too often protects doctors from accountability, leaving patients vulnerable.

We uncovered these problems after many months of investigative reporting. Doctors & Sex Abuse is a multimedia project that shares what we’ve learned. Our goal for this project is that it will lead to solutions that benefit the public.


http://doctors.ajc.com/table_of_contents/

That's just insane....

Don't sleep on Dentist either lots of sadistic and sexually assaulting muthafucka fuckery in that profession as well

There are good ones tho but too many fucked up ones getting away with shit.

When your children visit one you should be in the room with them doctors and dentist...
 
raisman_copy_-_h_2017.jpg



Aly Raisman Says She Was Sexually Abused by Former USA Gymnastics Doctor


Raisman expressed that she wants to help make changes in her sport so that girls in the future don't ever have to go through such traumatic experiences.

"I care a lot, you know, when I see these young girls that come up to me, and they ask for pictures or autographs, whatever it is, I just — I can't — every time I look at them, every time I see them smiling, I just think — I just want to create change so that they never, ever have to go through this," said Raisman, who also told 60 Minutes that she spoke to FBI investigators about Nassar after the Rio Olympics in August 2016.

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/ne...ually-abused-by-usa-gymnastics-doctor-1057129
 
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