How USA Gymnastics has changed since the Larry Nassar scandal

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(NEW YORK) — As American gymnasts prepare to dazzle on the Olympic stage in Tokyo this month, the sport is still struggling to shake off the specter of the Larry Nassar sex abuse scandal.

It’s been five years since the first women came forward publicly in 2016 to accuse the former USA Gymnastics national team doctor of sexual abuse under the guise of medical treatment.

Since then, hundreds of young women and girls have come forward. In 2017, Nassar pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 60 years behind bars for child pornography and other charges. One year later, he again pleaded guilty and was sentenced to an additional 40 to 175 years for multiple counts of sexual assault of minors.

While Nassar, 57, remains behind bars, the scars of his abuse linger on.

In wake of the crisis, USA Gymnastics, the national governing body for U.S. gymnastics, and the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committees have scrambled to repair their reputations and the trust of athletes, all while juggling multiple lawsuits. USAG also faces a threat from the USOC to decertify it as the organization overseeing the sport.

Despite touting reforms, athletes like Simone Biles and Aly Raisman have actively called out the organizations and distanced themselves from them for letting Nassar carry out his years of abuse.

This year, Biles, the most decorated gymnast of all time, will headline her own post-Olympic tour, which USAG usually runs, along with other elite female gymnasts.

At the U.S. Championships in 2019, she called out the organization in front of reporters while standing next to a USAG spokesperson.

“It’s hard coming here for an organization, having had them fail us so many times,” Biles said, tears welling in her eyes.

So, what has changed since then?

Reforms in the gymnastics world

Since the Nassar scandal, USAG has overhauled its leadership and went through four new presidents and CEOs in 23 months.

Current President Li Li Leung said USAG has gone in a new direction since 2016, and is focused on “creating a safe, inclusive and positive culture.”

“We recognize how deeply we have broken the trust of our athletes and community, and are working hard to build that trust back,” Leung said in a statement to ABC News. “We know that this kind of meaningful and lasting culture change does not happen overnight.”

Following a damning 2017 independent investigative report that found USAG had “significant gaps regarding the prevention and reporting of child sexual abuse,” the organization said it would adopt 70 recommendations, such as improving the screening of coaches, training to combat sexual abuse and the process for filing misconduct reports. USAG told ABC News “a vast majority” have been implemented already.

Since the Nassar scandal, USAG now requires 33% athlete representation on all boards and committees and created an Athlete Bill of Rights that focuses on protecting athletes from all forms of abuse.

The organization also created platforms for athletes to express their views and report concerns anonymously, without fear of retribution. Furthermore, a bill was passed in Congress in 2017 naming Safesport as an independent organization to respond to reports of sexual misconduct.

Vince Finaldi, an attorney representing about 300 Nassar survivors in a pending lawsuit against USAG and USOC, told ABC News that none of these efforts “really matter.”

“They had policies and procedures before; they didn’t follow them. They tightened up the policies and procedures, but unless they’re followed, kids are going to be vulnerable and kids are going to get abused,” Finaldi told ABC News.

Even with reforms, the relationship between USAG and its athletes is “forever damaged,” Finaldi said.

Calls for ‘the truth’

USAG told ABC News that it has participated in “at least six independent investigations” led by several congressional committees; the Indiana attorney general; Walker County, Texas; and the independent law firm of Ropes & Gray to look into the abuse of athletes, but some gymnasts say those probes were not truly independent.

Aly Raisman, who was captain of the 2012 and 2016 U.S. women’s Olympic gymnastics teams and is now retired, has repeatedly said those probes aren’t enough.

“I don’t know why USAG is saying they’re cooperating. I’ve spoken to many members of law enforcement who have said they’ve been extremely difficult, they’re not handing over all their documents and data,” she told CNN in a March interview. “Until we understand everything that happened — we have access to every single email, phone calls, data, every single thing you can imagine, we can’t believe in a future that’s safe for the sport.”

The saga continued last week with the release of the bombshell Department of Justice’s Inspector General report, which pointed to widespread failures within the FBI in investigating Nassar allegations. The report was released just before the 2021 U.S. Olympic gymnastic teams jetted to Tokyo for the games.

Complaints were first made against the doctor in 2015, but it took months for FBI agents to act on it, according to the report. In that time, “approximately 70 or more young athletes were allegedly sexually abused by Nassar” between July 2015, when USA Gymnastics first reported allegations about Nassar to the Indianapolis Field Office, and September 2016, according to the report.

Legal challenges drag on

For many Nassar survivors, there has been no closure as lawsuits against USAG and the USOC drag on in court.

Michigan State University, where Nassar was employed, agreed to a $500 million settlement with 332 Nassar survivors in 2018. However, a lawsuit is still pending in the case against USAG and USOC, which has about 550 claimants who claim they were abused by Nassar, due to USAG’s bankruptcy declaration also in 2018.

Leung said in June that the COVID-19 pandemic has prolonged the mediation process, but she’s hopeful it’ll be settled soon.

“Obviously, we would love to be out of bankruptcy [so] that we can be able to more freely move forward with all of the things that we have been working on and to not have this be a part of the narrative,” Leung told The Associated Press.

In 2020, USAG offered a $215 million settlement, but an agreement has yet to be reached. Even that proposal was ripped as a “cover up” by athletes like Raisman as the deal would release several people and groups from liability, including former USAG President and CEO Steve Penny, who was in power at the time of the Nassar scandal.

John Manly, an attorney who works with Finaldi to represent Nassar survivors, including Biles, said when it comes to USAG “largely the rhetoric has changed,” but there has been little other meaningful movement.

“The changes that matter to the athletes honestly are because Simone insisted on it. The fact that the Karolyi Ranch closed, USA Gymnastics didn’t do that voluntarily,” Manly told ABC News, citing the national team training camp site in Texas where Nassar worked.

“I continue to believe that this is an organization that is incapable of putting athletes first. Its set up and its senior staff is focused on two things: money and medals,” Manly said. “Until you begin to focus on athletes’ well-being as your primary goal, and until we have a full accounting of what happened, there’s no moving forward.”

Sarah Klein, a former competitive gymnast and survivor of Nassar’s abuse, told ABC News that U.S. gymnastics hasn’t turned over a new leaf.

“No athlete that I know has anything but disdain for USAG and USOPC. How could you believe in organizations who have the blood of little girls on their hands?” she said. “My heart goes out to the athletes competing at these Olympics who deserved — and deserve — more. Nothing has changed for the better. As the lies and cover-up continue to be unpacked and exposed, it is fair to say that things are far worse.”

Heading into the 2021 Games while moving past the abuse and USAG turmoil isn’t easy.

The “Fierce Five” team — Raisman, Gabby Douglas, McKayla Maroney, Kyla Ross and Jordyn Wieber — that won gold at the 2012 London Olympics, as well as some members of the 2016 Games’ “Final Five,” including Biles, achieved top honors in the sport despite the abuse they suffered.

“They all won gold, despite having to endure what [Nassar] did to them,” Manly said. “You think about that, in the context of Simone Biles and what she’s been able to achieve despite that, [it] is nothing less than heroic.”

Earlier this month, Biles opened up about the depression she suffered after she was abused by Nassar in an episode of her Facebook Watch show, “Simone vs. Herself.”

“With gymnasts, if you get injured … your ‘heal time’ is four to six weeks. But then with something so traumatic that happens like this, there’s no four to six weeks,” she said. “There’s like actually no time limit or healing time for it.”

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John Mayer scores 10th top-10 album with ‘Sob Rock’

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John Mayer‘s new album of retro-inspired music, Sob Rock, has debuted at number two on the Billboard album chart.

It’s John’s 10th top-10 album. Every studio album he’s released, dating all the way back to his major-label debut, 2003’s Room for Squares, has reached the top 10, and so did his 2008 live album, Where the Light Is.

John launched Sob Rock with a ’70s/’80s inspired ad campaign, which stated, “John Mayer…had an idea: Why not make a record that feels like those unforgettable albums we grew up loving? It’s not easy to do. You’d basically have to be John Mayer to pull it off. But he is. And he did.”

John will hit the road on his Sob Rock tour next year, beginning February 17 in Albany, NY.  He wrote on Instagram, “Can’t wait to play these new songs. Hope to see you out there.”   That caption accompanied another retro-style ad, featuring a list of tour dates and a photo of John with the headline, “The one tall guy you won’t mind standing in front of you at a concert.”

If you want to see John before that, he’s touring this summer as part of the Grateful Dead spinoff band Dead & Company starting August 16.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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Watch now: Sneak peek of the ‘Army of the Dead’ prequel ‘Army of Thieves’

Stanislav Honzik/Netflix © 2021

Less than three months after his Army of the Dead had a hit debut on Netflix, director Zack Snyder has dropped a teaser for a prequel to the action film, called Army of Thieves.

The film centers on the pre-zombie fighting days of Matthias Schweighöfer‘s safe cracker and scene-stealer Ludwig Dieter, who in this adventure is recruited by Fast & Furious veteran Nathalie Emmanuel for an epic heist. 

Teased with pulling off a big job in Europe while world is distracted by the nascent undead outbreak, Emmanuel’s Gwendoline tempts Dieter with “one last chance to be a legend.” 

Schweighöfer himself is in the director’s chair this time, with Snyder producing. The snippet certainly feels like its own stand-alone adventure: set to Wagner’s “Ride of the Valkyries,” the clip that debuted as part of this past weekend’s Comic-Con@Home features gunplay, car stunts and, of course, the sight of massive money vaults clicking open. 

Army of Thieves debuts on Netflix later this year, but Snyder also has both a sequel to Army of the Dead and an animated spin-off called Army of the Dead: Lost Vegas also coming to the streaming giant.

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Early David Bowie collaborator John “Hutch” Hutchinson dies “after a long illness”

John Hutchinson, right, with David Bowie and The Buzz in 1966; Don Paulsen/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Guitarist John “Hutch” Hutchinson, who collaborated frequently with David Bowie during the late rock legend’s early music career, died Saturday, according to a post on Bowie’s official website.

“Our thoughts are with the family and friends of John Hutchinson who passed in hospital yesterday after a long illness,” reads the message, which was posted Sunday.

Hutchinson was played in three of Bowie’s bands, starting in 1966 when David hired him to play guitar his backing group, The Buzz. Then, in 1968, Hutch and Bowie teamed up with David’s then-girlfriend, vocalist Hermione Fatheringale, in the short-lived acoustic trio Feathers.

In 1968 and early ’69, Bowie recorded a series of demos with Hutchinson that included the first version of David’s classic song “Space Oddity.” These recordings were officially released in 2019 as part of a series of special box sets.

In 1973, Hutchinson served as a touring member of Bowie’s backing band The Spiders from Mars during what turned out to be that group’s farewell trek.

According to Hutchinson’s official website, he continued to play music in various projects after Bowie broke of The Spiders, but “spent much of his time since 1980 ‘working for a living’ in the oil industry.”

In 2014, Hutchinson published a memoir focusing on his experiences with Bowie called Bowie & Hutch.

A 2019 video interview with Hutchinson in which he reminisces about recording “Space Oddity” with Bowie and shares other recollections about collaborating with him has been posted on David’s official YouTube channel.

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More record-shattering heat waves are likely on the way due to climate change, scientists say

(NEW YORK) —The probability of record-shattering heat waves is increasing due to climate change, according to scientists who are measuring temperature predictions in a new way.

Researchers that looked into rate of warming, rather than how much warming has occurred, found that record-shattering heat waves occur in spurts during periods of accelerated climate warming, according to a study published Monday in Nature Climate Change.

Similar events as the back-to-back heat waves that have been occurring in the Western U.S., including triple-digit temperatures in the typically cool and wet Pacific Northwest, will become the norm if climate changes continue as business as usual, Erich Fischer, a climate scientist at ETH Zurich and the author of the study, told ABC News.

Under a high-emissions scenario, record-shattering heat extremes are two to seven times more probable from 2021 to 2050 and three to 21 times more probable between 2051 and 2080, according to the scientists.

Even if human-induced global warming was stabilized by aggressive mitigation, the frequency and intensity of heat waves would still be higher, but the probability of record-shattering events would be “notably reduced,” scientists said.

The models initially found climate records decreasing until temperatures began ramping up in the 1980s with a much higher rate of warming, Fischer said. It was then that scientists began seeing a sudden number of heat records as well as a “very high speed of pace” of records shattering temperature ceilings.

“Without climate change, we should expect these records to become rarer and rarer,” Fischer said, comparing the current climate to “an athlete on steroids,” adding, “If the world record would be broken by that by the high margin, that would be very suspicious.”

While the impact of climate change on heat waves is typically quantified by historical context — or how much a current or future event compares to itself in a world with less or no climate change — the changes can be marginal when measured in such a manner, the researchers said. Any given heat wave today would be hotter and more frequent than it would have been in the past.

Instead, looking at how heat extremes surpass or “shatter” the previous heat wave record could provide better insight into the driving mechanisms behind heat extremes — and offer a crucial factor for officials to consider when planning strategies on how to deal with the new normal, the researchers said.

“The take-home message of our study is that it really is no longer enough to just look at past records or past measurements of weather…” Fischer said. “We need to prepare for something different.”

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‘Black Widow’ getting early digital drop on August 10; Coming to Blu-ray, 4K Ultra HD, and DVD September 14

Marvel Studios

In a surprise for fans, Marvel Studios has announced that Black Widow will be dropping on all HD digital platforms earlier than anticipated: August 10. 

The film, which debut in theaters and via streaming on Disney+ Premiere Access on July 9, will also be coming to Blu-ray, 4K Ultra HD, and DVD on September 14.

Black Widow will also be packaged with never-before-seen bonus footage, including nine deleted scenes, as well as a gag reel and three featurettes. The three “making of” segments center, respectively, on the genesis of the project with director Cate Shortland, a feature on Scarlett Johansson and Florence Pugh‘s on-and-off-screen sisterly relationship and their training, and another on the worldwide scope of the spy thriller/standalone adventure of Johansson’s super-spy Avenger.

Marvel Studios is owned by Disney, the parent company of ABC Audio.

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Metallica books headlining concert in Hollywood, Florida, for November

Credit: Anton Corbijn

Metallica is going to Hollywood…Florida, that is.

The metal legends have announced a headlining concert taking place November 4 at the Sunshine State’s Hard Rock Live at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino.

Tickets go on sale to the general public this Friday, July 30, at 10 a.m. ET. If you’re part of Metallica’s Fifth Member fan club, you’ll have access to an exclusive pre-sale beginning Wednesday, July 28.

For all ticket info, visit Metallica.com.

Earlier this month, Metallica announced a pair of hometown concerts taking place in December at San Francisco’s Chase Center in honor of the band’s 40th anniversary. Those shows are exclusive to Fifth Members.

Meanwhile, Metallica will be headlining the Louder than Life, Aftershock and Welcome to Rockville festivals this fall. They’re also playing the Global Citizen Live concert special in September, and Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium as part of the ATLive festival in November.

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Gun violence in America: Defining the problem

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(NEW YORK) — It was lunchtime when a gun altered Crystal Turner’s life.

“I got the call at 12, noon,” Turner recalled to ABC News. “My 29-year-old daughter Jenea and my 23-year-old son Donell were murdered together.”

Jenea Harvison and her brother, Donell McDonald, were gunned down in Columbus, Ohio, by Harvison’s estranged husband, Roy Harvison, who is now serving a life sentence for aggravated murder.

“We know there are millions of other families now who have similar stories and similar experiences,” Turner said.

Jeannie She’s family is one of them. Her father survived the 2019 mass shooting at the Virginia Beach municipal building at left 12 dead.

“Even now it feels completely surreal for something so severe to hit so close to home,” She told ABC News. “On the other hand, I’m fully aware of the pain that so many families experienced that night. This trauma sticks with people forever.”

DeAndra Dycus understands. Dycus’ son, Dre Knox, was struck by a stray bullet in Indianapolis.

“He was 13 years old. Some young men started shooting outside the home and struck my son in the back of the head. A stray bullet flew through a window and left Dre as a non-verbal quadriplegic,” Dycus said.

Dre lived but, as his mom said, his life was taken.

“We have to bathe him. We have to dress him. We have to lift him out of bed to put him in his wheelchair. We have to change diapers,” Dycus told ABC News. “I have lost who Dre was and who we hoped he was going to be.”

As the country tries to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, with its unfair burdens and incomprehensible death toll, it is sickened anew by gun violence, with its unfair burdens and ever-growing death toll.

Between 2014 and 2019, an average of 38,826 Americans were killed by guns annually, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Of those, 23,437 — or 60% — were suicides.

Of late, police say, the increase in shootings is mainly due to urban gangs, but there are also variants, involving mass shootings, domestic violence and suicide. Much of it, experts say, is exacerbated by the health and economic strains wrought by COVID-19 and powered by the uniquely American affinity for and access to guns.

“You can’t shoot somebody without a gun,” said New York Police Commissioner Dermot Shea. “Identifying who’s carrying guns, the cops going out there and making the arrests, taking the guns off the street is great. Really what we need is the individual carrying the gun off the street.”

In Shea’s New York City, there was a 100% increase in shootings in 2020 from the year prior. Accidental shootings, domestic violence, suicide, stray bullets and mass casualty all contributed to it, but Shea said the biggest drivers of gun violence are gangs.

“Domestic, road rage, we certainly have seen those incidents. Accidental shootings, playing with a gun, and a friend shoots a friend, we’ve seen all of it with a little more frequency. But if you step back and look at the big picture, that is such a small percentage of what we see regarding gun violence,” Shea told ABC News.

“The vast majority of what we see is still gang-related,” Shea added. “It could be over turf, it could be over drug money. Oftentimes, tragically, it’s over nothing.”

There is no official count of how many Americans own guns but there are an estimated 400 million guns in the United States, the most heavily armed nation in the world. In the last quarter-century the Supreme Court has taken a broad view of the Second Amendment, which enshrines the right to bear arms.

“I certainly don’t think it was inevitable to the founders that this is where we would be, because the Second Amendment was not intended at the time to mean that people could use guns to commit acts of violence that was not in self-defense,” said Mary McCord, executive director of the Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection at Georgetown Law.

Until the Supreme Court’s Heller decision in 2008 permitted near-universal gun ownership for self-defense, McCord said the Second Amendment had been interpreted only to allow people to bear arms as part of a government-regulated, politically accountable militia.

“Even in that massive change to the way we understand the Second Amendment did the Supreme Court suggest that there was a right to bear arms to commit acts of violence, that there was a right for anyone to have a firearm for any purpose whatsoever,” she said.

This story is part of the series “Gun Violence in America” by ABC News Radio. Each day this week we’re exploring a different topic, from what we mean when we say “gun violence” — it’s not just mass shootings — to what can be done about it. You can hear an extended version of each report as an episode of the ABC News Radio Specials podcast. Subscribe and listen on any of the following podcast apps:

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TuneIn

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Report: Kanye West moves into Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium to finish ‘DONDA’ — now due out August 6

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Universal Music Group

After Kanye West‘s tenth studio album DONDA failed to materialize on Friday, reports have surfaced that the singer has set up shop in the most unlikely of places to finish the LP — Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

On Thursday, Ye held a sold-out listening event at the stadium with the intent of releasing the complete album a few hours later at midnight.  However, as of Monday, DONDA is still not out and it appears the Grammy winner is once again tweaking the album.

TMZ reports that the “Stronger” rapper has not left the stadium and has made the venue his new home until the studio effort is finalized.

The outlet reports that Ye’s team has renovated parts of the venue into a designated recording and living space.   Sources to TMZ say Kanye has, again, changed the album’s release date and anticipates to have DONDA out on August 6.

In addition, fans who attended the Atlanta United soccer game on Saturday snapped photos of Kanye walking around the venue.  In addition, Ye shared a video of the Saturday match to his personal Instagram, further backing up claims that he hasn’t left the stadium.

This marks the second time DONDA has been delayed.  Ye first teased the album in March 2020 and said it was originally slated to come out that July, but the offering never came.  It was later announced that the release was canceled because the rapper was further tweaking the LP.  

At last week’s NBA finals game, Ye confirmed DONDA‘s new release date, promising in a Beats by Dre commercial featuring sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson that the LP would drop on July 23.

Kanye has yet to reveal why he held off on releasing his album for a second time.

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Chevelle announces US headlining tour

Credit: Joseph Cultice

Chevelle has announced a U.S. headlining tour in support of the band’s new album, NIRATIAS.

The two-leg fall outing will run from September 1 in Kansas City, Missouri, to September 25 in Mankato, Minnesota, and then from November 4 in Milwaukee to November 21 in Pittsburgh.

“Well, we have to say we are pretty damn happy about a new year, a new album, and now, a new tour,” Chevelle says. “Here’s to seeing you all out there.”

Tickets go on sale this Friday, July 30. Visit GetMoreChevelle.com for the full list of dates and all ticket info.

NIRATIAS, Chevelle’s ninth studio effort, was released in March. It includes the singles “Self Destructor” and “Mars Simula.”

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