For Nassar Accusers From Michigan State Teams, Feelings of a Trust Betrayed
Lindsey Lemke — a gymnast who said Dr. Nassar abused her starting in junior high school and, after she became a Michigan State athlete,
on one occasion administered acupuncture in her pubic area — recalled his saying, “I do this to Olympians, to a lot of people.”
His reputation as doctor to the national gymnastics team preceded him.
“I trusted in the fact that I was at a top program, a top Division I school,” added Cate Hannum, a rower who said Dr. Nassar
regularly massaged her breasts under the pretext of medical treatment during some of her years at Michigan State.
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When Achenbach told her teammates, she said, “they didn’t think it was out of the ordinary, and I thought maybe it was me overreacting.”
An investigation conducted by a Michigan State attorney last year cleared university officials,
but the details of that investigation have not been made public.
Michigan’s attorney general has said he plans a new, independent investigation in the wake of reports and accusations
that Michigan State officials and coaches were told of Dr. Nassar’s behavior years before it became public, yet did nothing to stop him from treating athletes.
But a subset of the more than 256 reported victims whom the Michigan attorney general’s office
counted last week were Michigan State athletes at the time they say they were abused.