DENVER — There was an eight-year gap between the time young gymnasts and their parents started sounding warnings about a coach in 2017 and when he was arrested earlier this year on federal child pornography charges.
It took the U.S. Center for SafeSport — the agency formed by Congress to combat this type of abuse — until 2022 to sanction that coach, Sean Gardner.
Now, an Associated Press investigation has found that months before Gardner's arrest in August on allegations of installing cameras in a girls gym bathroom in Purvis, Mississippi, he was willing to accept a lifetime ban from coaching gymnastics as part of a deal where he would admit to the abuse, according to three people involved with SafeSport and its handling of the case.
The people spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation by SafeSport.
There was never a clear reason given for why the center did not finalize a permanent ban in a case one person called ''Nassar 2.0'' — a reference to the abuse scandal involving Larry Nassar that nearly destroyed USA Gymnastics and brought about the need for the SafeSport Center.
Meanwhile, Gardner has pleaded not guilty to federal child pornography charges and remains jailed pending trial, set for March 2.
Here are some of the key takeaways from the latest AP investigation.
Experts see significant difference between temporary and lifetime bans