@alyraisman says the knock came at 8 o'clock at night. The future Olympic gold medalist was competing in Rotterdam, Netherlands, in her first year at the coveted senior level, the group from which world and Olympic teams were selected. She was thousands of miles from home, nervous about the competition to come and without her usual support system of her parents and siblings. At the door was the team doctor for USA Gymnastics, Larry Nassar. "I thought you could use a massage," she says he told her. She was 16. It wasn’t the first time she says Nassar offered a massage under the guise of therapy and it wouldn’t be the last, as Raisman disclosed in a recent interview with TIME and in her new book, 'Fierce.' Raisman is the second member of 2012 Olympic women’s team to accuse Nassar of abuse. In October, teammate McKayla Maroney tweeted that Nassar molested her for years, beginning when she was 13. Nassar is in jail awaiting sentencing after pleading guilty to child pornography charges in Michigan. He is also named in more than 100 lawsuits filed by gymnasts and athletes he treated while working with USA Gymnastics and at Michigan State University. Unaware she was being molested, and still believing she was receiving medical treatment that would help her, Raisman attributed Nassar's behavior to his being tired or jetlagged from the trips to competitions around the world. Now Raisman, photographed at home with her mother Lynn Faber Raisman on Nov. 9, says she knows better. "I know people will say 'Why didn’t she tell her mom? Why didn’t she say anything?' But those questions are unfair," she says. "The fact is I didn’t really know it was happening to me. What people don’t get is that he was a doctor. I would never have imagined that a doctor would abuse me or manipulate me so badly." Read the full interview on TIME.com. Photograph by Sage Sohier for TIME

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 11月14日 23時39分


@アリー・レイズマン says the knock came at 8 o'clock at night. The future Olympic gold medalist was competing in Rotterdam, Netherlands, in her first year at the coveted senior level, the group from which world and Olympic teams were selected. She was thousands of miles from home, nervous about the competition to come and without her usual support system of her parents and siblings. At the door was the team doctor for USA Gymnastics, Larry Nassar. "I thought you could use a massage," she says he told her. She was 16. It wasn’t the first time she says Nassar offered a massage under the guise of therapy and it wouldn’t be the last, as Raisman disclosed in a recent interview with TIME and in her new book, 'Fierce.' Raisman is the second member of 2012 Olympic women’s team to accuse Nassar of abuse. In October, teammate McKayla Maroney tweeted that Nassar molested her for years, beginning when she was 13. Nassar is in jail awaiting sentencing after pleading guilty to child pornography charges in Michigan. He is also named in more than 100 lawsuits filed by gymnasts and athletes he treated while working with USA Gymnastics and at Michigan State University. Unaware she was being molested, and still believing she was receiving medical treatment that would help her, Raisman attributed Nassar's behavior to his being tired or jetlagged from the trips to competitions around the world. Now Raisman, photographed at home with her mother Lynn Faber Raisman on Nov. 9, says she knows better. "I know people will say 'Why didn’t she tell her mom? Why didn’t she say anything?' But those questions are unfair," she says. "The fact is I didn’t really know it was happening to me. What people don’t get is that he was a doctor. I would never have imagined that a doctor would abuse me or manipulate me so badly." Read the full interview on TIME.com. Photograph by Sage Sohier for TIME


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