USA Gymnastics’
position on misconduct toward minors/athletes in general
and the Infante case in particular
USA Gymnastics is
a national membership organization with approximately 90,000 athlete members and
17,000 instructor and professional members. These individuals take part in
gymnastics programs nationwide.
The organization also selects teams that represent the United States in
international competition, sanctions domestic gymnastics competitions and
promotes participation in the sports of artistic gymnastics, rhythmic
gymnastics, acrobatic gymnastics, and trampoline and tumbling. USA Gymnastics
does not own nor operate any gymnastics clubs or conduct any local programs.
USA Gymnastics
expects its professional members and clubs to provide a positive and healthy
environment for youngsters who participate in our sport. USA Gymnastics
provides an education program, has a strong
code of ethics and requires completion of a safety-certification program for
professional members. The organization has also added a requirement for
background checks as a condition of professional membership and
renews background checks every two years.
As part of its
commitment to children and families participating in our sport, USA Gymnastics
takes seriously any allegation of misconduct or inappropriate behavior. The
organization’s bylaws include provisions for
processing allegations and spell out the types of discipline, including
termination of membership, which may be administered by the organization.
When USA
Gymnastics terminates the membership of a coach or other professional member,
that individual is permanently ineligible for membership in USA Gymnastics.
This lifetime ban means the individual does
not have any of the rights or privileges associated with membership in USA
Gymnastics, including but not limited to participation in any event conducted or
sanctioned by USA Gymnastics. In addition, USA Gymnastics
makes such terminations public by posting a complete list of terminated members
on USA Gymnastics’ Web site. The list of terminated members also is published
in official publications at least once a year and when
someone is added to the list.
Because USA
Gymnastics is a membership organization and not a licensing organization,
termination of membership, the public display of that termination and a lifetime
ban on participation in sanctioned events is the
most serious action available to us. USA Gymnastics' jurisdiction does not
extend to the business affairs of gymnastics coaches or clubs. Moreover, USA
Gymnastics recommends that in choosing a gymnastics program
or club, parents follow the same steps they would when selecting any activity
for their children: talk to the owners and coaches, take a tour of the facility,
observe several sessions, watch the interaction between coaches
and athletes, and talk to other families who have their children in that club.
Unlike the
situation that often occurs in medical and educational settings, USA Gymnastics
is typically not notified of inappropriate behavior in person and immediately
after the fact, when quick investigation might uncover
critical evidence or prevent recurrence of dangerous acts. Instead, the
organization is more likely to learn of an offense well after (sometimes years
after) an alleged event occurred. Therefore, while we have urged, and
will continue to urge, victims to contact legal authorities directly, we have
not made such notification on their behalf and without their consent.
The Infante matter
In the
case of Stephen Infante, USA Gymnastics received a complaint in 1997 from adults
who, years earlier, had been athlete members of our organization. That
complaint was thoroughly investigated by USA Gymnastics,
which hired a retired FBI agent to look into the charges. The investigation
resulted in termination of Mr. Infante’s professional membership, public notice
of that termination and a lifetime ban on participation in sanctioned
competitions and events. Since at least April 1998, Mr Infante's name has been
continuously included on the published list of members terminated by USA
Gymnastics.
USA Gymnastics’
termination of Infante's membership has not prevented him and, regrettably,
does
not prevent him, from continuing to be involved in a gymnastics business. He
remains on USA Gymnastics’
list of terminated professional members and will continue to be. But beyond
that, restrictions on his activities are dependent on the outcome of legal
proceedings such as those now underway in Massachusetts.
USA Gymnastics has cooperated fully by sharing its investigative file with
prosecutors and it will continue to do so.
There are more
than 107,000 professional and athlete members of our organization who do not
want their industry tainted by a few bad apples. When such rare cases occur,
the entire sport falls victim, as well as those
directly affected. We hurt for those victims, and for our sport, and we will,
therefore, continue to take every punitive action available within our
jurisdiction, and cooperate fully with police and prosecutors if and when
cases rise to that level.
Links to
referenced documents
USA Gymnastics
Code of Ethics (http://www.usa-gymnastics.org/publications/technique/1996/9/ethics.html)
USA Gymnastics
Bylaws, Articles 9-10 (http://www.usa-gymnastics.org/organization/2007/usag-bylaws.pdf)
USA Gymnastics
list of terminated members (http://www.usa-gymnastics.org/membership/memship-noticeto.html)