What A Day - A Settlement For Victims Of Larry Nassar
Episode Date: December 14, 2021We’ve reached another grim benchmark since the pandemic began almost two years ago. According to the New York Times database, the U.S. has reached 50 million known cases of COVID-19. The country is ...also on the cusp of passing or has already passed 800,000 deaths, with the last 100,000 happening at a relatively quick pace.USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee agreed to a $380 million settlement for the victims of Larry Nassar, the former doctor of the U.S. women’s gymnastics team. The settlement marks the end of a five-year legal fight, and is one of the largest settlements on record for survivors of sexual assault. And in headlines: the death toll continues to climb in Kentucky after tornadoes devastated the state this past weekend, former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin is now expected to plead guilty on federal civil rights charges in the death of George Floyd, and eight pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong were sentenced to prison yesterday.Show Notes:NY Times: “As U.S. Nears 800,000 Virus Deaths, 1 of Every 100 Older Americans Has Perished” – https://nyti.ms/3dQOymNFor a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It is Tuesday, December 14th. I'm Gideon Resnick.
And I'm Josie Duffy Rice. And this is What A Day, the answer to the question,
what podcast should always be legal on the California Baby Bar?
That's right. Kim Kardashian just passed that test. So congrats to her on getting that one
right.
I mean, that question should be the whole exam in my personal
opinion. Yeah, you have all the legal skills you need with that question. On today's show,
American gymnasts reached a $380 million settlement for the abuse they faced from
former team doctor Larry Nassar and more. Plus, it may be weeks before we have final counts
on both deaths and levels of destruction.
We're going to have an update on the rescue and recovery efforts in Kentucky after last weekend's tornadoes.
But first, let's begin by talking about the pandemic here in the United States.
So Gideon, we've reached another grim benchmark since this began almost two years ago now.
Yeah, it is really crazy to think about.
According to the New York Times database, the U.S. has passed 50 million known cases,
the idea there being that the actual number is quite a bit higher.
Also, the country is on the cusp of or has already passed, depending on where you look,
800,000 deaths, with the last 100,000 happening at a relatively quick pace.
We're going to link to the story that breaks down all this information.
But of those nearly 800,000 deaths, something like 75% of them were people 65 and older.
So another way to look at it, about 1 in 100 older Americans died from COVID.
It is really stark and grim, but I do recommend reading this New York Times piece that had a lot of different voices of older Americans talking about what this has all meant in their respective lives.
Yeah, it's a really good piece and really moving. A lot of the numbers you were talking about
tell us where we've been in the pandemic, but let's talk about the current moment. So there
was some news from the Supreme Court yesterday on vaccine mandates. Is that right?
Yeah. So we've seen a lot of these challenges come before the court, but this one pertained
to a group of healthcare workers and doctors in New York State who had challenged this vaccination mandate that did not include religious exemptions.
So the Supreme Court refused to block the requirement in an unsigned order.
But Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote a dissent saying that the court had failed to uphold its commitment to religious liberty.
The court has taken this pretty much exact same approach in the past, most recently with a similar challenge from healthcare workers in Maine. More broadly, though, on mandates, I saw a Wall Street Journal
story talking about the ramifications of a ruling by a federal judge who temporarily halted the
Biden administration's order that healthcare workers across the country get vaccinated.
That pause, combined with labor shortages, has actually led some hospitals to just drop the requirement.
The American Hospital Association, per that same story, estimated that about 42% of all facilities nationwide have mandates in place. So a lot of this is kind of unresolved as we go on
forward here. Yeah, that's actually an unbelievable statistic. Only 42%. Yeah. That is the view on the
pandemic here in the US where
cases and deaths have been trending up as of late. What's the news from other countries?
Yeah, so let's talk about Europe for a second here, specifically the UK, which as we reported
yesterday, gave us some early real world information about how vaccines were responding
to Omicron. So yesterday, officials there were sounding the alarm about how quickly cases of
Omicron were spreading across the country.
And Prime Minister Boris Johnson said that the country had its first death of a person infected with the variant.
Omicron is producing hospitalizations and sadly, at least one patient has now been confirmed to have died with Omicron.
So I think the idea that this is somehow a milder version of the virus,
I think that's something we need to set on one side.
Yeah, so part of his government's response looks a little bit like ours. It has involved a greater
push to get boosters to everyone 18 and older by New Year's Day. The early, and again, a lot we
don't know, studies indicate that protection against infection from Omicron drops pretty significantly with just two doses. Denmark and Norway are also projecting that Omicron cases
are going to dominate infections in the coming days. There, researchers in Denmark recently
also have said that something like three quarters of Omicron cases thus far have been in people who
have received two vaccine doses, which, which again is another example of some evidence
that that alone might not be sufficient.
So that percentage is relatively similar
to some of the known cases
the U.S. has identified thus far too.
So that is the latest on COVID right now.
We're gonna keep you updated as we learn more
and hear from some more experts soon.
We're gonna talk about some big news now
from the sports world.
Yesterday, USA Gymnastics
and the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee agreed to a $380 million
settlement for victims of former national team physician Larry Nassar. The settlement marks the
end of a five-year legal fight and is one of the largest settlements on record for survivors of
sexual assault. It includes more than 500 athletes, all of whom were assaulted over a decades-long
period, including Olympic gold medalists Simone Biles, Michaela Maroney, and Ali Raisman.
Nassar is accused of sexually abusing girls as young as 13.
Here's how Raisman described what she went through with Nassar herself during an interview
with NBC's The Today Show back in 2017.
He would work on us alone in our hotel room.
You know, he would come to my hotel room alone.
But because I was so young and he was a doctor, I never thought, you know, you look out for strangers when you're little.
But I didn't think a doctor wasn't allowed to be working on me alone.
I just I didn't know.
Yeah, dear God.
And so Nassar, of course, is now in prison serving a de facto life sentence without parole.
Josie, you said the settlement is with USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Olympic and
Paralympic Committee. Can you tell us why they were also part of this case?
Nassar's victims alleged that his rampant abuse was really only possible because of the complicity
of organizations like USA Gymnastics, right, which apparently ignored reports of misconduct
from athletes and failed to alert authorities when they knew that there was evidence of,
you know, abuse and assault. In fact, in 2016, after the Larry Nassar accusations became national news, USA Gymnastics
paid Michaela Maroney $1.25 million to sign a confidentiality agreement in hopes of keeping
her accusations about Nassar quiet, which ESPN called, quote, effectively buying the
silence of one of the sport's most recognizable Olympians.
Yeah.
You know, and it's not only Nassar who got away with abuse, right?
An Indianapolis Star investigation found that gymnastics coaches across the country were
allowed to get away with assault and abuse repeatedly.
And please note that the anecdotes that we're about to share are very disturbing.
In one case, USA Gymnastics received at least four complaints about a Georgia coach, William
McCabe, including one that stated, quote, he should be locked in a cage before someone is raped.
These complaints were never acted on nor reported to authorities, and McCabe continued to coach
children for eight more years until one parent reported him to the FBI.
Turns out he was not only molesting underage girls, but secretly videotaping them and posting
their pictures and videos on the internet.
Overall, the Indianapolis Star found that the organization had compiled, quote,
complaint dossiers on more than 50 coaches, which they kept in a drawer in their executive office.
But rarely were those complaints acted on.
And it's worth noting that the FBI has also been accused of not taking these complaints
seriously as well.
Yeah.
Oh my god.
It's insane.
So why did the settlement take so long?
Yeah, it's a good question. After all, Michigan State University, which also employed Larry Nassar,
already agreed to a $500 million settlement for survivors back in 2018. But meanwhile,
USA Gymnastics and the USA Olympic and Paralympic Committee have taken significantly longer. Much
of that can be attributed to these organizations' unwillingness to take responsibility for their
failures.
Sarah Klein, a former competitive gymnast and now an attorney and co-chair of their Survivors Committee, told ESPN, quote,
This settlement occurred because of a five-year, bare-knuckled legal fight the USOPC and USA
Gymnastics decided to initiate against me and 500-plus sister survivors.
After thousands of hours of this survivors committee's time,
blood, sweat, and tears, today we prevailed. Klein is referencing years of avoidance and
deflection from the organizations, especially the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee,
who argued that they weren't responsible for Nassar's abuse because he wasn't an employee
of theirs. And even once these organizations did agree to pay, there was a lot of back and forth
about the amount. At least a few settlements were rejected by the Committee of Survivors for being
too low. The organizations allegedly spent over $100 million on legal fees to avoid a major
settlement. So that's a pretty much lose-lose for them, and this is a major victory for the athletes.
Right. And so Josie, this settlement isn't just monetary, though. There's other stuff here, right? Correct. So as part of the settlement,
USA Gymnastics will be required to have at least one abuse survivor on its board of directors.
They also must create a restorative justice process for victims, among other things. And
this is a big deal because it means a new era for the organization, for USA Gymnastics, which went
from being a highly profitable, successful sports organization with all these endorsements, all these deals, to filing for bankruptcy in 2018, right, due to these accusations and these lawsuits.
And in fact, at one point, many survivors wanted USA Gymnastics dissolved entirely, but that was impossible because of the technical rules of bankruptcy filing.
So now the organization can rebuild with the direct input
and hopefully continued leadership of survivors.
And perhaps this time they'll do a better job
of protecting victims of abuse.
So here's hoping.
And that is the latest for now.
We'll be back with some headlines.
Headlines.
The death toll continues to climb in Kentucky in the wake of tornadoes that devastated the state this past weekend.
Governor Andy Beshear said yesterday that at least 74 people are confirmed dead and over 100 are still missing.
Thousands of homes are damaged, if not entirely destroyed.
And it may be weeks before we have final counts on both deaths and levels of destruction.
One location that has become a symbol of the tornado's destruction is a candle factory in the city of Mayfield.
About 110 employees were working there on Friday night when the tornadoes hit.
Many of them wanted to leave work when they heard warning sirens, but their supervisors allegedly threatened to fire them if they left early.
Eight workers were found dead and more are still missing.
The state rushed to clear fallen trees and power lines yesterday, while residents set up outdoor kitchens to feed those whose homes were destroyed. As of our recording on Monday night, more than
25,000 customers in Kentucky are still without electricity. President Joe Biden said that he's
flying to the state tomorrow to survey the damage, adding this. We're going to get this done. We're
going to be there as long as it takes to help. Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin
is expected to now plead guilty on federal
civil rights charges in the 2020 death of George Floyd. Chauvin previously pleaded not guilty,
but according to a notice sent out yesterday by the court's electronic filing system,
a hearing to change his plea has been scheduled for tomorrow morning. Chauvin was already convicted
of murdering George Floyd in state court, and he was sentenced to 22 and a half years in prison.
Chauvin and three other former officers involved in Floyd's death were set to go to trial in late
January on federal charges. The charges allege they deprived Floyd of his constitutional rights
by using unreasonable force. All four officers pleaded not guilty, and as of now, it is not
clear whether anyone else will follow Chauvin and change their plea as well. Former media mogul Jimmy Lai and seven other pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong were
sentenced to prison yesterday in the government's latest move to crack down on free speech.
Last year, Lai and the other activists gathered on June 4th to remember the day that pro-democracy
protesters were massacred in China's Tiananmen Square in 1989. The vigil has been held for
three decades by the organization Hong Kong
Alliance in support of patriotic democratic movements of China. But last year, the vigil
was banned as China moved to introduce its new national security law for Hong Kong, which has
made it easier to punish protesters and reduce the city's autonomy. Lai was sentenced to 13 months
in prison while his co-defendants got between four and 14 months of jail time. He did make a statement shortly before being sentenced saying, quote,
let me suffer the punishment of this crime so I may share the burden and glory of those young
men and women who shed their blood on June 4th to proclaim truth, justice, and goodness.
Trump's former chief of staff, Mark Meadows, is one step closer to the greatest honor a
Trump loyalist can receive, a contempt of Congress charge. The House panel investigating
the January 6th insurrection voted last night to hold Meadows in contempt. The next step before
the Justice Department gets involved is a full floor House vote, which could happen as soon as
this week. Meadows began cooperating with the committee last month, but last week he reversed
course and argued that executive privilege prevented him from cooperating any further.
Unfortunately for him, Meadows' moment
of legal clarity came after he had handed over thousands of documents to the panel,
which committee members have already used to illuminate his involvement in the Trump White
House's slow motion insurrection response. On Sunday, the House panel released a report laying
out the large role Meadows played in trying to overturn the 2020 election. As for the contempt
of Congress' charge and whether Meadows will be convicted, overturn the 2020 election. As for the contempt of Congress
charge and whether Meadows will be convicted, here's what Congressman Adam Schiff had to say
last night. Mr. Meadows' behavior and his refusal to do his moral duty shows why we need stronger
tools to enforce congressional subpoenas. And I expect the Justice Department to move as swiftly
in dealing with Mr. Meadows as it did with Mr. Bannon and prosecute him.
This is not technically legal advice, Gideon, but I do not recommend agreeing to help,
giving a lot of documents over that implicate you and then deciding you don't want to help.
I just don't think that's the best angle at avoiding charges.
Yeah, I think as Mr. Meadows' attorney,
I'd like to once again invoke opposite day,
which has been our current legal strategy
for this entire proceeding.
That is about as sophisticated as his seems to be.
So good job.
Congrats, Esquire.
Thank you very much.
Thank you for including my title.
And those are the headlines.
One more thing before we go.
So we have a quick favor to ask.
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I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
I'm Gideon Resnick.
And early congrats to Mark Meadows on your contempt of Congress charge.
You know, a lot of people try, but few people succeed at that.
And that is, that's an honor.
Congress only charges important people.
It's true.
It is true.
I haven't gotten charged yet myself.
So you're ahead of me, Mark.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
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Our head writer is John Milstein,
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