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Nassar's superior at MSU has been arrested

http://www.espn.com/college-sports/...larry-nassar-michigan-state-arrested-michigan

“Attorney John C. Manly, who represents more than 150 victims of Nassar, issued a statement Monday.

"Our clients are encouraged by the Attorney General's action today," Manly said in the statement. "It demonstrates that he is serious about investigating the systemic misconduct at MSU that led to the largest child sex abuse scandal in history and holding the responsible parties accountable."”
 
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Tear it down.... or we will
 
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COVERUP!!!!!



IIRC the Michigan Attorney General (reportedly running for governor), said that they didn’t see a reason to investigate MSU and didn’t have the resources or staff to investigate them (paraphrasing).

Well, people got upset and look who suddenly found the staff and resources to investigate Michigan State. Funny that.

Now we reportedly have an arrest and charges against a Michigan St Dean. This can’t be. Lou Anna told us there was absolutely NO evidence of wrongdoing at MSU (despite MSU employees allegedly telling victims who came forward not to speak about Nassar).

Did Lou Anna participate in a cover up? She assured everyone they looked into this and there was nothing to see.

If you were to follow Lou Anna’s declaration from 2011, you would say it seems pretty ‘purposeful, premeditated and pervasive’ at MSU. :rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:
 
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Here's an article, emphasis mine...

Fallout begins in wake of Larry Nassar scandal with arrest of Michigan State dean


The long-awaited first shoe has dropped at Michigan State in the Larry Nassar scandal.

The question is how many more are to come?

Dr. William D. Strampel, the 70-year-old former Dean of Michigan State’s College of Osteopathic Medicine, where he oversaw serial pedophile Larry Nassar, was arrested Monday evening and booked into the Ingham County, Michigan, jail. Neither the charges nor bail information was immediately disclosed.

Strampel, who resigned his post at MSU in December citing health reasons, was an obvious target for law enforcement. The Michigan attorney general has expanded its probe beyond Nassar and into those who may have known of his actions or failed to properly report claims of abuse.

The long-awaited first shoe has dropped at Michigan State in the Larry Nassar scandal.

The question is how many more are to come?

Dr. William D. Strampel, the 70-year-old former Dean of Michigan State’s College of Osteopathic Medicine, where he oversaw serial pedophile Larry Nassar, was arrested Monday evening and booked into the Ingham County, Michigan, jail. Neither the charges nor bail information was immediately disclosed.

Strampel, who resigned his post at MSU in December citing health reasons, was an obvious target for law enforcement. The Michigan attorney general has expanded its probe beyond Nassar and into those who may have known of his actions or failed to properly report claims of abuse.


Nassar likely abused hundreds of girls and women across three decades as an athletic doctor, the majority of them gymnasts seeking treatment for injuries. He also served as the team doctor for USA Gymnastics. In November 2017, he pled guilty to 10 counts of sexual assault, as well as federal child pornography charges. The 54-year-old former USA Gymnastics doctor is currently serving a 60-year sentence in federal prison on the outskirts of Tucson, Arizona.

Nassar was sentenced up to an additional 175 years in state prison after a remarkable multiweek sentencing hearing in Ingham County that saw more than 150 of his victims, from famed gold-medal winning gymnasts to girls still in their teens, speak. He received another possible 125 years in another deal in Eaton County, Michigan.

Repeatedly, victims demanded an investigation into not just Nassar’s acts, but who, if anyone, knew of and enabled them. That meant both USA Gymnastics, which used Nassar as a volunteer for its powerhouse women’s team, and mostly MSU, which employed Nassar for decades.

The attorney general’s office finally announced a wide-ranging investigation earlier this year, appointing William Forsyth as the special prosecutor in the case. The investigation has sought all communication and files at Michigan State involving Nassar and related parties.

Strampel’s failures to stop Nassar were the most obvious.

In 2014, a Michigan State University Title IX investigation was conducted into a complaint about Nassar’s treatment of a patient. Nassar was not charged with a crime and was allowed to keep his job. Strampel, the dean since 2002, offered his vocal support for Nassar throughout and kept Nassar updated on the investigation. After Nassar was allowed to continue, Strampel created a series of protocols for Nassar, including prohibiting the doctor from seeing female patients alone and requiring he wear gloves during certain procedures.


That alone suggested Strampel found some issue with Nassar’s actions, which Nassar said were legitimate medical procedures. If everything was fine, why special precautions?

However, Strampel never followed up on the protocols. Neither patients nor nurses in the office were told. Nassar was essentially allowed to operate on the honor system. Nassar went on to abuse additional patients.

Whether Strampel’s charges are, in any way, associated with the above remains unknown. It may also have to do with separate criminal behavior. Michigan State released a statement late Monday intimating other non-detailed issues with Strampel.

“Allegations have arisen that question whether his personal conduct over a long period of time met MSU’s standards,” the statement read. “We are sending an unmistakable message that we will remove employees who do not treat students, faculty, staff or anyone else in our community in an appropriate manner.”

Failures to properly deal with Nassar date back at least as far as 1997. That was when a then-16-year-old gymnast first complained to Michigan State gymnastics coach Kathy Kleges about Nassar abusing her. Nothing was done. Additional complaints to officials, coaches and trainers piled up through the years.

Nassar was allowed to continue, both in East Lansing and with his work with USA Gymnastics, which he brandished as credibility with uncertain patients and their parents.

The scandal has rocked MSU. Longtime school president Lou Anna K. Simon resigned earlier this year and the university is facing an onslaught of civil charges that could push toward $1 billion in settlements.

“Our clients are encouraged by the Attorney General’s action today,” John Manly, a California-based civil attorney who represents over 100 victims, said in a statement. “It demonstrates that he is serious about investigating the systemic misconduct at MSU that led to the largest child sex abuse scandal in history and holding the responsible parties accountable.”

The attorney general’s office has scheduled a news conference Tuesday to update its work on the case. With Strampel arrested, the case appears to have moved past just Nassar.

How much further and to how many more arrests is what everyone is waiting to find out.

https://www.yahoo.com/sports/michigan-state-fallout-begins-wake-larry-nassar-scandal-015816256.html
 
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Reactions: TheGLOV and psuken
This MSU statement is as disingenuous as it comes. Getting rid of someone after they step down. Very noble MSU.

“We are sending an unmistakable message that we will remove employees who do not treat students, faculty, staff or anyone else in our community in anappropriate manner.”
 
This MSU statement is as disingenuous as it comes. Getting rid of someone after they step down. Very noble MSU.

“We are sending an unmistakable message that we will remove employees who do not treat students, faculty, staff or anyone else in our community in anappropriate manner.”

Isn’t it time for the Big Ten to remove some cash from MSU? Paging Delany.
 
This MSU statement is as disingenuous as it comes. Getting rid of someone after they step down. Very noble MSU.
I think I read he stepped down as the Dean of the college, but was still on the payroll as a professor.

But, I agree. He vacated his top position and now the university thumps its chest and says "look at what we are doing about this!"

Like closing the barn door after the horses get out.

OL
 
Here's an article, emphasis mine...

Fallout begins in wake of Larry Nassar scandal with arrest of Michigan State dean


The long-awaited first shoe has dropped at Michigan State in the Larry Nassar scandal.

The question is how many more are to come?

Dr. William D. Strampel, the 70-year-old former Dean of Michigan State’s College of Osteopathic Medicine, where he oversaw serial pedophile Larry Nassar, was arrested Monday evening and booked into the Ingham County, Michigan, jail. Neither the charges nor bail information was immediately disclosed.

Strampel, who resigned his post at MSU in December citing health reasons, was an obvious target for law enforcement. The Michigan attorney general has expanded its probe beyond Nassar and into those who may have known of his actions or failed to properly report claims of abuse.

The long-awaited first shoe has dropped at Michigan State in the Larry Nassar scandal.

The question is how many more are to come?

Dr. William D. Strampel, the 70-year-old former Dean of Michigan State’s College of Osteopathic Medicine, where he oversaw serial pedophile Larry Nassar, was arrested Monday evening and booked into the Ingham County, Michigan, jail. Neither the charges nor bail information was immediately disclosed.

Strampel, who resigned his post at MSU in December citing health reasons, was an obvious target for law enforcement. The Michigan attorney general has expanded its probe beyond Nassar and into those who may have known of his actions or failed to properly report claims of abuse.


Nassar likely abused hundreds of girls and women across three decades as an athletic doctor, the majority of them gymnasts seeking treatment for injuries. He also served as the team doctor for USA Gymnastics. In November 2017, he pled guilty to 10 counts of sexual assault, as well as federal child pornography charges. The 54-year-old former USA Gymnastics doctor is currently serving a 60-year sentence in federal prison on the outskirts of Tucson, Arizona.

Nassar was sentenced up to an additional 175 years in state prison after a remarkable multiweek sentencing hearing in Ingham County that saw more than 150 of his victims, from famed gold-medal winning gymnasts to girls still in their teens, speak. He received another possible 125 years in another deal in Eaton County, Michigan.

Repeatedly, victims demanded an investigation into not just Nassar’s acts, but who, if anyone, knew of and enabled them. That meant both USA Gymnastics, which used Nassar as a volunteer for its powerhouse women’s team, and mostly MSU, which employed Nassar for decades.

The attorney general’s office finally announced a wide-ranging investigation earlier this year, appointing William Forsyth as the special prosecutor in the case. The investigation has sought all communication and files at Michigan State involving Nassar and related parties.

Strampel’s failures to stop Nassar were the most obvious.

In 2014, a Michigan State University Title IX investigation was conducted into a complaint about Nassar’s treatment of a patient. Nassar was not charged with a crime and was allowed to keep his job. Strampel, the dean since 2002, offered his vocal support for Nassar throughout and kept Nassar updated on the investigation. After Nassar was allowed to continue, Strampel created a series of protocols for Nassar, including prohibiting the doctor from seeing female patients alone and requiring he wear gloves during certain procedures.


That alone suggested Strampel found some issue with Nassar’s actions, which Nassar said were legitimate medical procedures. If everything was fine, why special precautions?

However, Strampel never followed up on the protocols. Neither patients nor nurses in the office were told. Nassar was essentially allowed to operate on the honor system. Nassar went on to abuse additional patients.

Whether Strampel’s charges are, in any way, associated with the above remains unknown. It may also have to do with separate criminal behavior. Michigan State released a statement late Monday intimating other non-detailed issues with Strampel.

“Allegations have arisen that question whether his personal conduct over a long period of time met MSU’s standards,” the statement read. “We are sending an unmistakable message that we will remove employees who do not treat students, faculty, staff or anyone else in our community in an appropriate manner.”

Failures to properly deal with Nassar date back at least as far as 1997. That was when a then-16-year-old gymnast first complained to Michigan State gymnastics coach Kathy Kleges about Nassar abusing her. Nothing was done. Additional complaints to officials, coaches and trainers piled up through the years.

Nassar was allowed to continue, both in East Lansing and with his work with USA Gymnastics, which he brandished as credibility with uncertain patients and their parents.

The scandal has rocked MSU. Longtime school president Lou Anna K. Simon resigned earlier this year and the university is facing an onslaught of civil charges that could push toward $1 billion in settlements.

“Our clients are encouraged by the Attorney General’s action today,” John Manly, a California-based civil attorney who represents over 100 victims, said in a statement. “It demonstrates that he is serious about investigating the systemic misconduct at MSU that led to the largest child sex abuse scandal in history and holding the responsible parties accountable.”

The attorney general’s office has scheduled a news conference Tuesday to update its work on the case. With Strampel arrested, the case appears to have moved past just Nassar.

How much further and to how many more arrests is what everyone is waiting to find out.

https://www.yahoo.com/sports/michigan-state-fallout-begins-wake-larry-nassar-scandal-015816256.html


Good grief; Sandusky should wear shorts and Nassar should wear gloves, then it's all good. smdh

On a side note: John Manly, the Cali attorney, is situated to become an extremely rich man. No offense to the lawyers on the board, but I hate you all! :eek:
 


Wait a minute........ A Michigan State Dean, (and boss of Nassar), had video on his MSU work computer of Nassar abusing a young girl and did nothing? No one in IT at MSU found this during their investigation? Lou Anna’s investigation appears more and more like a whitewash with every passing story on Nassar.
 
Lou Anna’s investigation appears more and more like a whitewash
I know it is wrong, however, I would love to send Lady Lou Anna a nice letter with the quote's she had about Penn State. Include information about her wanting Penn State removed from the conference.
Is the schadenfreude to which many of you speak?
:cool:

OL
 
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