[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 39 (Tuesday, March 7, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1634-S1635]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PROTECTING YOUNG VICTIMS FROM SEXUAL ABUSE ACT
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, yesterday I introduced the Protecting
Young Victims from Sexual Abuse Act, a bill to protect young athletes
who participate in the U.S. amateur ranks from sexual abuse.
Before last summer's Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, the
Indianapolis Star published an investigative piece that revealed that
amateur gymnasts were sexually abused in gyms all across the country.
No one knew how widespread the problem was in that sport.
But throughout the investigation, the Indianapolis Star tallied--
after reviewing police files and court cases across the country--368
gymnasts who alleged they were sexually abused over a 20-year time
period.
Kids as young as 6 were secretly photographed in the nude by coaches.
Young athletes were molested by coaches during ``therapy'' sessions.
Sexual predators spent countless hours with children one-on-one and
abused them for years before anything was done. These accounts were
devastating. And they were just the tip of the iceberg.
After reviewing this report, I, along with my colleagues Senator
Leahy, Senator Blumenthal, and Senator Donnelly, wrote to USA
Gymnastics to urge the organization to do more to protect their young
athletes.
Specifically, we urged the organization to update its policies and
require that all members--including coaches, athletes, and others--
immediately report to law enforcement when there is an incident of
sexual abuse committed against an athlete.
After we sent the letter, several sexual abuse victims from
California reached out to my staff. They revealed that they were abused
by individuals affiliated with USA Gymnastics. I told my staff that I
had to meet them.
Six brave women, who were each abused as young gymnasts at various
points in their careers, then travelled across the country to share
their testimonies with me. Two athletes from another sport who were
sexually abused also joined us. I will never forget their faces that
day. When I walked into the room, I could sense the overwhelming
devastation wrought on their lives.
One by one, they shared their hopes and dreams as young athletes. The
gymnasts talked about how, while pursuing future Olympic glory, they
put their complete faith in the USA Gymnastics infrastructure. They
fully trusted the coaches and doctors who had the USA Gymnastics seal
of approval. And it was in this environment that they were sexually
exploited by those whom they trusted.
Several of the women had been abused repeatedly--over the course of
months and years--by a USA Gymnastics team doctor named Larry Nassar.
Nassar is currently being prosecuted for a number of horrific crimes
against children. One of those brave women was Jamie Dantzscher, a
retired gymnast who won the bronze medal competing in the 2000 Olympics
in Sydney. Jamie told me how she trained as a young girl in California.
When she was 13 years old, she was thrilled to be invited to train with
the national USA Gymnastics team. It was with the national team that
Nassar gained her trust. Nassar became her ``buddy,'' in the midst of
an intense training environment. With USA Gymnastics backing him as a
famous doctor and trainer, Jamie felt that there was absolutely no
reason to believe Nassar was not trustworthy.
So when Jamie went to see Nassar for back pain, she was confused when
Nassar began to touch her in inappropriate places. She was 13 and 14
years old. As she described the abuse to me in graphic detail, the
other women around the room began to sob quietly. The tactics that
Nassar used were too familiar to them.
And for the longest time, each of the victims believed that their
horrific experiences were one-off events, that they were isolated in
their own subjective memories. But the sharing of their stories--
together in that room with me and the others--affirmed to them that
what they had experienced was wrong.
One of the other gymnasts who bravely shared her story with me was
Jeanette Antolin, who competed on the national team in the late
nineties. Hailing from southern California, Jeanette shared how she was
incredibly fearful of ever saying anything about the abuse committed
against her because she believed she was being treated by a world-class
doctor with USA Gymnastics' approval. As an aspiring Olympian, she
feared that if she complained about anything, it would affect her
career.
The same fears had overcome Jessica Howard, a rhythmic gymnast who
was 15 years old when Nassar began abusing her. She was sent to Nassar
for hip problems, and he told her that she should not wear any
underwear for her treatment. At the time, she was confused and afraid
to say anything to anyone. She believed she would be prevented from
pursuing her dreams if she said anything.
I also met Doe Yamashiro from southern California. Doe was sexually
abused by a 1984 Olympic Coach named Don Peters. In the mid-1980s,
Coach Peters began fondling Doe and then had sex with her. Doe told me
and the group of the pain and anguish she still suffers from many years
later. The same pain and devastation was felt by all of the young
victims who were in the room.
One of the common themes I heard from their stories was not just the
predatory behavior of the perpetrators, but also how the USA Gymnastics
institution failed to protect them. One of the women told me how she
heard USA Gymnastics officials say at one point that it was their top
priority to obtain ``medals and money'' and that a ``reputation of a
coach'' should not be tarnished by an allegation raised by a victim.
This shocked me, and as I dug deeper into the USA Gymnastics
institution, which is considered a ``national governing body'' under
Federal law and oversees over 3,000 gymnasiums nationwide, I saw that
their policies made it harder for victims, rather than easier, to
report incidents of abuse. Their bylaws stated, for example, that the
only way for a member athlete to ``effectively'' make a complaint about
a coach was through a signed, written complaint.
Furthermore, USA Gymnastics' policy indicated that the organization
``may'' report sexual abuse to law enforcement authorities if a child's
safety was at risk, but it was not mandatory. It further stated that it
complied with State mandatory reporting laws, but if a State law didn't
require anything more, there was no other obligation to do anything
else.
It is my strong belief that these arcane policies left children
vulnerable to the advances of sexual predators and failed to protect
them even when incidents came to light. For example, in reviewing USA
Gymnastics' history in public accounts, there were multiple instances
where gymnastics coaches were convicted of heinous child sex crimes,
years after USA Gymnastics had received complaints about those coaches.
In other words, USA Gymnastics appears to have sat on reports of sexual
abuse for years, while predators continued to prey on children.
At the end of my meeting with the survivors, I looked at each of them
and told them that I would work on legislation to protect other kids
and amateur athletes like them from sexual predators.
The legislation we have introduced does three main things to help
child sex abuse survivors. It is a strong bipartisan bill, and I want
to extend my deepest thanks to those Members who have worked with me on
it, including Senators Collins, Grassley, Donnelly, Nelson, Blumenthal,
Flake, McCaskill, Ernst, Klobuchar, Shaheen, Warren, Harris, Cortez-
Masto, Rubio, and Young.
The first thing the bill does is to mandate that any person
affiliated with USA Gymnastics or other national governing bodies
immediately report child abuse, including sexual abuse, to local or
Federal law enforcement. This requirement would apply not only to USA
Gymnastics, but to each of the other 47 national governing bodies that
oversee various Olympic sports, including USA Taekwondo, USA Speed
Skating, USA Swimming, and USA Cycling. It is absolutely imperative
that a bright line be drawn for all those working with national
governing bodies that, once there are facts giving rise to suspect
child or sex abuse, a report must be made as soon as possible to proper
authorities. This bill mandates that.
[[Page S1635]]
Second, this bill strengthens Masha's law, which was named after a 5-
year-old Russian orphan who was adopted by an American man only to be
raped and sexually abused by him for 6 years until he was finally
caught by the FBI in 2003. Her adoptive father had not only abused her,
but he had also produced over 200 sexually explicit images of that
abuse. Masha's law allows civil suits by minors against sex abuse
perpetrators who violate a variety of crimes against children,
including sex trafficking, sexual exploitation, and child pornography
crimes.
This law is significant for victims to obtain justice because there
are times when criminal cases against perpetrators are declined due to
difficulties in proving a criminal case. Therefore, for many
traumatized victims, the only avenue for them to ever seek justice
against their perpetrators is through Masha's law or other civil
remedies.
The bill, therefore, updates Masha's law to help victims. It
clarifies, for example, that victims of child sex crimes are entitled
to statutory damages of $150,000 and possible punitive damages, due to
the particularly severe nature of the crimes.
The bill also extends the statute of limitations for Masha's law. The
statute of limitations extension is part of legislation that Senator
Cornyn and I have worked on over the past couple of years, called the
Extending Justice for Sex Crime Victims Act.
Finally, the bill makes reforms to the Ted Stevens Olympic and
Amateur Sports Act, which establishes ``national governing bodies''
like USA Gymnastics. The Stevens Act specifically lists the authorities
and duties of national governing bodies.
When I first wrote to USA Gymnastics about its poor handling of
sexual abuse allegations, they replied that the Stevens Act limits
their abilities to fully protect athletes from sexual abuse, so this
bill fixes that. It requires national governing bodies like USA
Gymnastics to develop for each of its members: specific policies and
procedures for the mandatory reporting of sex abuse to law enforcement,
policies and procedures to keep track of coaches who leave one gym due
to complaints and then go to another gym and repeat cycles of abuse,
policies to ensure that minors and amateur athletes are not in one-on-
one situations with adults, policies to facilitate reporting of sex
abuse allegations to national governing bodies and other authorities,
and stronger oversight and enforcement policies so that the national
governing bodies take a greater role in making sure that the policies
are actually being implemented and enforced throughout the country.
These provisions give national governing bodies like USA Gymnastics
absolutely no excuse to make sure that all members are subjected to the
strongest training and procedures to prevent sexual abuse.
It further forces organizations like USA Gymnastics to impact the
culture of their sports, through various oversight mechanisms, to make
sure that all members of such organizations adhere to the strictest
standards when it comes to sexual abuse prevention.
Finally, I would like to close with this. All over the country,
victims of sexual abuse are coming forward to disclose how they were
abused and exploited at the height of their innocence when they were
children. Multiple victims from California and throughout the country
have, for example, contacted my office and described with great courage
their pain and anguish. Rather than list statistics, I want you to know
that each of these individual stories represents an untold amount of
pain and suffering that reverberates throughout generations, leaving
devastation in its path. I urge my colleagues in this body to work with
me and the sponsors of this bill to pass this important legislation to
protect victims.
I would also like to acknowledge the support for this bill from the
National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, National Children's
Alliance, Rights4Girls, University of Utah Law Professor Paul Cassell,
Child Sex Crime Victims' Lawyer James Marsh, Crime Victims Expert Steve
Twist, National Crime Victims Center, Child USA, National Association
of VOCA Administrators, National Organization for Victim Assistance,
ToPrevail, ChampionWomen, National Children's Advocacy Center, National
Alliance to End Sexual Violence, the National Association to Protect
Children, and the Rape Abuse & Incest National Network.
They are on the front lines of this work, and I greatly appreciate
their support.
Thank you very much.
Ms. COLLINS. Mr. President, today I wish to support the Protecting
Young Victims from Sexual Abuse Act of 2017. I commend Senator
Feinstein for her leadership on this bill and for shining a spotlight
on the atrocious crimes perpetrated against young American athletes.
Sexual abuse is a heinous crime that must be eradicated in every
corner of our society. I have long worked to prevent sexual assault and
ensure that survivors have access to the resources and support they
need. Last year, the Indianapolis Star reported on allegations of
sexual abuse and misconduct made against coaches, gym owners, and other
adults affiliated with USA Gymnastics over several decades. These very
serious allegations included sexual abuse against young athletes.
Predatory coaches were allowed to move from gym to gym, undetected by a
lax system of oversight. The investigation also revealed that officials
at USA Gymnastics, one of America's most prominent Olympic
organizations, failed to alert police to many incidents of sexual abuse
that occurred on their watch.
These crimes have hurt hundreds of victims across various sports.
This Protecting Young Victims from Sexual Assault Act would require
amateur athletic governing bodies, such as USA Gymnastics and other
U.S. Olympic organizations, to promptly report every allegation of
sexual abuse to the proper authorities. This legislation would help
survivors receive justice and protect more people from becoming
victims.
In addition, the Protecting Young Victims from Sexual Assault Act
would require these national governing bodies to develop robust
policies and procedures for mandatory reporting to law enforcement and
to develop training and oversight practices to prevent abuse. This bill
would also bolster Masha's Law, the law that lets minors bring civil
suits against sexual predators and extends the statute of limitations
for such cases.
The young athletes who train to represent our country at the top
levels of competition and those at all levels who aspire to compete
should not have to fear victimization by trusted coaches and sports
officials. I want to again thank Senator Feinstein for her leadership
on this issue. I urge my colleagues to support the legislation.
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