Behind the Aly Raisman interview on 60 Minutes

Behind the Aly Raisman interview on 60 Minutes
Behind the Aly Raisman interview on 60 Minutes

This week on 60 Minutes, three-time Olympic gold medal gymnast Aly Raisman tells correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook that she was sexually abused by former USA Gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar.

"I was in denial," she tells LaPook in a story that was first broadcast in November 2017. "You don't want to let yourself believe, but you know, I am a victim of sexual abuse. Like, it's really not an easy thing to let yourself believe that."

More than 400 women have alleged similar abuse by Nassar. The first U.S. gymnasts to speak out about Nassar appeared on 60 Minutes in February 2017. In interviews with LaPook, three former gymnasts accused Nassar of sexually abusing them more than a decade before Raisman joined the national team.

USA Gymnastics
USA Gymnastics

Raisman's story, and those of other women, set off an extraordinary chain of events that led to the resignations of the most powerful people in the sport, including just this past week, the current President of USA Gymnastics Kerry Perry.  

ot-alyraismangymnasta.jpg
Gymnast Aly Raisman shows Dr. Jon LaPook her Olympic medals. CBS News

Raisman says she decided to speak publicly about the abuse because she wants to help warn other young athletes. She tells LaPook that she and other athletes didn't realize at the time that Nassar gained their trust through a predatory technique called "grooming," which builds emotional bonds between a predator and a victim.

Alexandra Raisman of the USA performs during the Women's Floor Exercise Final at the Artistic Gymnastics events of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Rio Olympic Arena in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 16 August 2016. Soeren Stache/AP IMAGES

"He would always bring me, you know, desserts or gifts," Raisman says. "He would buy me little things. So I really thought he was a nice person. I really thought he was looking out for me."

Her story echoes the accounts of the other athletes LaPook spoke with in February 2017.

Because the athletes were instructed to keep a strict diet while they were training, former gymnast Jeanette Antolin says Nassar would sneak them snacks and candy. She says the secret treats and friendly conversation helped build trust with the young gymnasts. As a member of the U.S. National Team from 1995 to 2000, Antolin received treatment from Nassar for several years.

"I thought he was a great guy"

"He was a buddy," she recalls in the video above. "He was someone that we would talk to when we were getting treatment, if we had a hard day. He was a listening ear. He would make us laugh. When it's such a serious environment, that would be the world. It could fix your day."

Because Antolin trusted Nassar, she says she didn't think of his actions as anything other than an acceptable medical procedure. As she told LaPook on the broadcast in February, "It was treatment. You don't complain about treatment."

Raisman's experience was similar because she says that, as a teenager, she didn't know that she and other athletes weren't supposed to be alone with Nassar.

"My mom and I are so close," she says. "I told her literally everything, except for that, because I didn't know. You know, I didn't know it was wrong. I never was educated on what being sexually abused really is."

Aly Raisman and her parents, Lynn and Rick Raisman CBS News

Raisman and her parents say they appeared on 60 Minutes to help educate other families about the importance of talking to children about sexual abuse.

"I think the most important thing, if anyone takes anything away from this interview is sit down with your kids and explain to them that predators aren't just strangers," says Aly's mother, Lynn Raisman. "They can be highly educated. They can be very well-respected in the community. It could be a family member. It could be a family friend."

Aly Raisman is aware that the subject of sexual abuse is an awkward topic to talk about with children, but she hopes her interview inspires parents to start the conversation — because the consequences can be lasting.

"I think it's important for people to know, too, I'm still trying to put the pieces together today," Raisman says. "You know, it impacts you for the rest of your life."

The video above was originally published on November 12, 2017 and produced by Ann Silvio and Lisa Orlando. It was edited by Lisa Orlando.

f