“They knew that the strategy they were pursuing was dangerous to young children and they pursued it anyway.”
When Indianapolis Star reporters began to break news that former USA Gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar abused more than 150 women, Nancy Hogshead-Makar met with them to explain how oversight of sexual abuse works in club and Olympic sports—basically, she said, there had long been very, very little. “Larry Nassar, or somebody like Larry Nassar, was inevitable,” Hogshead-Makar recently told Mother Jones. “By not imposing any child protection policies on youth sports, it’s inevitable that you’re going to have a monster that’s going to come out.”...
...It also says that people need to report if they suspect child abuse, not if they know there’s child abuse. One of the things that we need to make sure that we educate people on is that they don’t need to do their own investigation. In fact, they shouldn’t do their own investigation. Interviewing a child requires special expertise. You tell the child protective services, the FBI, or the local police and let them take it from there...
https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2018/02/this-olympian-turned-lawyer-is-fighting-to-prevent-another-larry-nassar/
"You tell the child protective services, the FBI, or the local police and let them take it from there..."
ReplyDeleteSo they can traumatize the child in the process and create lifelong issues.