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Thread: Busted Martial Artists

  1. #991
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    Albert George Williams

    Karate Instructor Gets 200 Years in Prison for Abusing Children in S. California
    By Epoch Newsroom
    January 29, 2018 5:35 pm Last Updated: January 29, 2018 5:42 pm


    Albert George Williams. (Lake Elsinore Police Department)

    A California martial arts instructor was sentenced to 200 years to life in prison after he was convicted of nine counts of lewd and lascivious acts on children and other sexual abuse charges, ABC7 reported.

    Albert George Williams, 68, was convicted Jan. 19 of the charges, which includes one count of witness intimidation, according to the Jan. 28, ABC affiliate report.

    It was reported that a 10-year-old girl told her parents that she was abused by Williams, who was her neighbor and a karate instructor at the time—operating a karate studio from his garage. The incident happened in 2012.

    Detectives were then led to other victims of Williams.

    In July 2014, he was convicted of the crimes and was sentenced to 150 years to life in prison. He filed an appealed and was granted a retrial, leading to a later sentence of 200 years.

    Deputy District Attorney Julie Baldwin said that Williams intimidated victims from talking to their parents, saying they would be beaten up by gang members or worse, Patch.com reported in 2014.

    One girl told authorities that “she was fearful of [the] defendant because he would tell her and the other children stories about getting the letter ‘S’ carved into their faces for snitching,” the report said.

    Williams also apparently tried to frighten the father of a child, saying that his son was a gang member who had been released from prison and killed several people.

    Williams “said that if anyone ever hurt him or any of his family members, his son would have his back,” according to officials in a brief.

    Court documents said that the abuse took place between 2011 and 2012.
    Hold the phone. This guy gets 200 years and Larry Nassar gets 175?
    Gene Ching
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  2. #992
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    well, if the rumors are true they will both get what's coming to them in an 'eye for an eye' type of way. I know you were being sarcastic, but neither of them will last as long as their sentences and the first 90 days for both will be a living hell for them.

    reminds me of a song

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5J_qadIwM60
    "George never did wake up. And, even all that talking didn't make death any easier...at least not for us. Maybe, in the end, all you can really hope for is that your last thought is a nice one...even if it's just about the taste of a nice cold beer."

    "If you find the right balance between desperation and fear you can make people believe anything"

    "Is enlightenment even possible? Or, did I drive by it like a missed exit?"

    It's simpler than you think.

    I could be completely wrong"

  3. #993
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    Scott Naugle

    Martial arts teacher busted for not registering as sex offender 15 years ago
    By Megan Cloherty | @ClohertyWTOP
    January 26, 2018 3:20 pm


    Scott Naugle, of Laurel, moved to Maryland 15 years ago but never registered as a sex offender. He’s been running a martial arts studio during that time and working with a children, a violation of his sentence. (Courtesy Howard County Police)

    WASHINGTON — Fifteen years after a Tennessee man moved to Maryland and opened a martial arts studio, he was charged for failing to register as a sex offender and for having contact with kids.

    Howard County police received a tip that the owner of Leverage Jiu-Jitsu Academy in Fulton, Maryland, was an unregistered sex offender, said Sherry Llewellyn with the police department.

    Scott Naugle, 44, Laurel, is now facing two counts related to his failure to register when he moved to Maryland. He was convicted of sexual battery of a child in 2003 in Tennessee in the early days of the digital sex offender registry. It’s unlikely someone could skirt the National Sex Offender Registry today, Llewellyn said.

    “These sex offenders are required to re-register. Some of them every three months. The moment that one of them does not check in and appropriately register, a warrant is issued for their arrest,” she said of the way the system works now.

    And as the owner of the martial arts studio, investigators said he had access to minors, whom he is restricted from interacting with.

    Naugle was ordered to register as a sex offender for life as part of his sentence, according to Howard County police.

    “To date, police have not received any allegations of sexual misconduct involving Naugle in Howard County,” police said.

    however police ask that anyone who may have been a victim of Naugle or has knowledge that anyone fell victim to him is asked to contact police at 410-313-STOP or send an email to HCPDcrimetips@howardcountymd.gov.

    This situation could be prevented if anyone listened to our suggestions here, Oso.
    Quote Originally Posted by GeneChing View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Oso View Post
    Yea. I think I've spoken somewhere on the forums about the issue (as I see it) of MA schools operating as day care centers w/o having to go through the same licensing as a day care center needs to have.
    Yes, indeed, we've discussed that idea here before. I agree that regulation of some sort should be enforced, even though it would wreck our economy for a while because it would force so many schools to close or charge more to cover legal registration fees and such.
    Gene Ching
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  4. #994
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    yea, or maybe parents should potentially get a background check on whomever they leave their kid with.

    i think the whole 'after school pickup' thing is probably cheaper than a real day care or legit after school program and is therefore very attractive to parents who assume that a krotty master is honorable...and i'm gonna stop before i digress lol.
    "George never did wake up. And, even all that talking didn't make death any easier...at least not for us. Maybe, in the end, all you can really hope for is that your last thought is a nice one...even if it's just about the taste of a nice cold beer."

    "If you find the right balance between desperation and fear you can make people believe anything"

    "Is enlightenment even possible? Or, did I drive by it like a missed exit?"

    It's simpler than you think.

    I could be completely wrong"

  5. #995
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    Christopher Gunning

    Kung fu teacher slit friend’s throat with meat cleaver and smashed cannabis bong over his head
    Former drug dealer Christopher Gunning later described himself as “the calmest guy in the world”
    By Neil Docking Crown Court Reporter
    14:08, 2 MAR 2018 UPDATED 15:08, 2 MAR 2018

    A martial arts instructor who slit his housemate’s throat with a meat cleaver described himself as “the calmest guy in the world”.

    Former drug dealer and recovering addict Christopher Gunning volunteered teaching youngsters kung fu at China Spirit in Wirral.

    But he ambushed Christopher Heywood after arguing with his friend of 15 years at their shared home in Hothfield Road, Wallasey.

    After slashing him nine times, he smashed a glass cannabis bong over his head and the victim ran into the street covered in blood.

    High Court judge Mr Justice Robin Spencer today jailed Gunning for 12 years, after he was found guilty of attempted murder.

    He said: “He was begging you to stop. He said ‘you’re going to kill me’. You replied ‘kill you? I’ll f***ing kill you.

    “You lifted his head up by the hair with your left hand and with your right hand, drew the cleaver across his exposed throat.

    “Mercifully the pressure you used was not sufficient to cut through the delicate and vital strictures of the neck, but you very easily could have killed him.”

    Liverpool Crown Court heard the pair had a spare bedroom, which Mr Heywood’s two-year-old daughter used when she stayed over.

    Gunning also had friends and family use the room and they had a “heated argument” over it at around 12.50pm on September 21 last year.


    Christopher Gunning, 38, of Hothfield Road, Wallasey, was found guilty of attempted murder and jailed for 12 years

    They pushed and shoved each other and 38-year-old Gunning told roofer Mr Heywood to leave, but he refused and went to his room.

    The court heard Gunning was battered by armed men in 2004 when dealing cannabis and as a result kept the cleaver under his bed.

    Graham Pickavance, prosecuting, said he grabbed the weapon, entered his friend’s room and first struck him to the back of the head.

    He thought he had been hit with a baseball bat and ended up on his hands and knees begging for mercy until the attack finally ended.

    The victim later fled outside screaming for help, while Gunning followed him, shouting “come back and I’ll kill you”.

    Mr Heywood sought refuge at the Co-Operative Funeral Home in Liscard Road, where staff gave him first aid and called an ambulance.

    He was taken to hospital and treated for a gaping wound to his left forearm, plus cuts to his throat, forehead, head, right thigh and back.

    The “traumatised” dad, who still suffers from pain and anxiety, felt unable to return to work, moved home and is awaiting counselling.

    Mr Pickavance said police went to the house at around 1.10pm and found “a trail of blood leading upstairs to the first bedroom”.

    Gunning arrived and said he was handing himself in, before officers recovered the bloodstained meat cleaver in the back garden.

    He told police: “I’ve hurt my housemate quite viciously haven’t I? I don’t have much of an excuse.”

    Gunning said they had “history” and during an argument he hit his pal with the meat cleaver, but it wasn’t “intentionally”.

    He claimed he just wanted to “scare him out of the house” and described himself as “the calmest guy in the world”.


    The meat cleaver Christopher Gunning, 38, of Hothfield Road, Wallasey, used to try to kill his housemate Christopher Heywood

    When told his victim’s throat had been slashed, Gunning replied: “Oh Jesus Christ I can’t confirm or deny anything, it’s like it’s not me, it’s not reality.”

    He admitted wounding with intent, but burst into tears when he was found guilty of attempted murder after a four-day trial.

    Lauren Soertsz, defending, said it was a “spontaneous” attack by her client, who felt he had been “pushed and pushed” by his friend.

    She said Gunning had received counselling in prison as days before the incident, a friend committed suicide, leaving him feeling “fragile”.

    Ms Soertsz said because of his martial arts he “knows discipline” and said he “ordinarily is a perfectly law-abiding individual”.

    Justice Spencer accepted it was “out of character” and that Gunning lost his temper and his intent to kill was “fleeting”.

    However, he said he couldn’t accept there was any significant degree of provocation and the violence he used was of “a completely different level”.
    So much for calm. Still waters run deep.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
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  6. #996
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    summarizing the sumo scandals

    Sumo wrestles with its image amid string of scandals
    An alcohol-fuelled restaurant brawl that left a wrestler with a fractured skull, and a sexual assault situation involving the sport’s highest-ranked referee, have rocked the sport.


    Former grand champion Harumafuji of Mongoliaretired after fracturing the skull of countrymanTakanoiwa in an altercation at a restaurant in October 2017. (KOJI SASAHARA / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO)

    By JIM ARMSTRONGThe Associated Press
    Tues., March 6, 2018
    TOKYO—The most damage inflicted in sumo in recent times has been to the image of Japan’s tradition-steeped national sport.

    Two scandals — an alcohol-fuelled restaurant brawl that left a Mongolian wrestler with a fractured skull, and a sexual assault situation involving the sport’s highest-ranked referee — have rocked the sport in recent months. Those episodes followed a match-fixing investigation in 2011 and the death of a teenage wrestler in training in 2007 that have tainted sumo over the past decade.

    Organizers are hoping to restore its battered reputation when the Spring Grand Sumo tournament starts on the weekend.

    Takanoiwa, who fractured his skull in an altercation with former Grand Champion Harumafuji in a restaurant last October, is hoping to make a comeback at the Osaka event.

    “I’m just focusing on doing my best,” the 28-year-old Takanoiwa told reporters last week during a training session for the tournament. “It will take a bit more time to be ready.”

    A healthy Takanoiwa wouldn’t solve all sumo’s problems, but would be a big step in the road to recovery.

    He was hurt after a group of Mongolian wrestlers had assembled at a restaurant during a regional tour.

    Harumafuji was reported to have become aggravated when Takanoiwa repeatedly checked his mobile phone while the two were conversing.

    In addition to Harumafuji, who was forced to retire last November in the wake of the incident, grand champion Hakuho also was present and had to defend his inability to intervene before the situation got out of control.

    The altercation dominated news programs and headlines for weeks. Adding to the bad publicity, the sport’s top-ranked referee was forced to resign earlier this year over a sexual harassment scandal.

    Shikimori Inosuke apologized to the Japan Sumo Association for allegedly kissing a teenage referee and touching him on the chest while intoxicated, during a regional tour of Okinawa in December.

    Inosuke said he had no recollection of the incident, and the junior referee declined to file charges.

    In the wake of the scandal, though, Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko didn’t attend January’s New Year tournament for the first time in four years.

    Weeks after that, Egyptian wrestler Osunaarashi was caught driving without a license after a vehicle collision and was ordered to pay a $4,700 (U.S.) fine.

    The recent incidents are just the latest scandals to rock the sumo world.

    In 2011, the JSA decided to cancel the spring tournament after revelations that 14 wrestlers were involved with match-fixing.

    In 2010, grand champion Asashoryu, also of Mongolia, announced his retirement following reports that he injured a man while intoxicated.

    In the most troubling case in 2007, the 17-year-old wrestler Takashi Saito died when he was beaten over the head with a beer bottle at the direction of his trainer.

    Saito’s stable master, Junichi Yamamoto, and three wrestlers subsequently were arrested and charged with manslaughter. In May 2009, Yamamoto was sentenced to six years in prison.

    The incident brought substantial political pressure to the governance of the sport in Japan.

    In response to the latest scandals this year, the Japan Sumo Association announced that a third-party committee has been convened and will question every member of the JSA. About 900 people, including active wrestlers and elders, will be included in the inquiry.

    “Our goal is the preservation of sumo,” said committee chairman Keiichi Tadaki, a former prosecutor general.

    Busted Martial Artists & Sumo
    Gene Ching
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  7. #997
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    Woo Yong Jung

    Halifax taekwondo grandmaster suspended over caning
    Neither the student nor the student's parents complained about the incident
    By Anjuli Patil, CBC News Posted: Mar 12, 2018 7:08 PM AT Last Updated: Mar 13, 2018 4:59 PM AT


    Woo Yong Jung is head instructor and owner of Woo Yong's Taekwondo Academy. (CBC)

    Anjuli Patil
    Reporter
    Anjuli Patil is a reporter and occasional video journalist with CBC Nova Scotia's digital team.

    A Halifax taekwondo grandmaster has had his coaching credentials at local and national taekwondo events suspended after he struck a 17-year-old student with a bamboo cane in early January.

    Woo Yong Jung, head instructor and owner of Woo Yong's Taekwondo Academy on Kempt Road, caned the student in front of numerous members of the club, but neither the student nor the student's parents complained. The Maritime Taekwondo Union (MTU) issued Jung's suspension.

    "Master Jung has done a tremendous amount to advance the study of taekwondo in Canada. He is the only grandmaster in Atlantic Canada and has been teaching for 30 years. This isolated incident is, unfortunately, being blown way out of proportion," Jung's lawyer, Jason Gavras, told CBC News in an email.

    2 investigations

    The union said in a news release issued Monday the caning incident, as well as a second alleged incident are being investigated.

    The initial incident was reported Jan. 15. The second incident is in relation to Jung's subsequent behaviour at the National Taekwondo Championships held in Ottawa the weekend of Feb. 15-18.

    "It is not part of what taekwondo has as part of its principles, its tenets," said union president Douglas Large. "We do not, as masters and instructors, use corporal punishment."

    The results of the investigations will be handed over to an independent discipline panel for review and possible additional sanctions, the union said in a news release. Sanctions range from dismissal of the complaint to permanent expulsion from the union.

    No police charges

    Gavras said Jung, the student who was disciplined and his family are "quite surprised that this matter has become a story."

    "They consider it largely a non-event and closed long ago," Gavras said. "This entire matter is the result of a very botched process conducted by a small, informal group of people within the MTU and one anonymous complainant."

    Halifax Regional Police investigated the incident, but did not lay any charges.

    "The youth did not require any medical attention and did not suffer physical injuries," Const. Carol McIsaac told CBC News in an email.

    Gavras said Jung believes this is a case of his competitors trying to damage his reputation because of his success in producing champions. Jung himself won a bronze medal at the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona.

    Parental support for Jung

    When Large was asked by CBC News if he was impartial in this incident, he said he's not involved in the investigation or any of the procedures and processes underway.

    Meanwhile, the chairperson of the Woo Yong Parents Association said he supports Jung.

    "We're rather surprised and rather bewildered by the whole situation," said chairperson Byron Kendall. "There was a decision that was made by a family, a decision on discipline and how to discipline a young man to try to correct some difficult behaviour and that decision involved Master Jung."

    Kendal said he has "absolutely no concern" about the safety and security of his six- and nine-year-old children when they're in the care of Jung.

    Large said he's been practising taekwondo for nearly 20 years and this is the first time he's heard of caning in the sport.

    "It's not what I teach in my practice, it's not what anyone that I know outside of this incident would ever do," said Large.

    Gavras said Jung's discipline was "entirely in keeping with his cultural tradition and training and the student, having studied in Korea, was fully aware of this and doesn't see it as a problem."
    Back when I taught kids, I had a few parents pull me aside and tell me it was okay if I needed to beat their kids for discipline. I never did. Beat your own dang kids. That wasn't what you hired me for.

    Thread: Busted Martial Artists
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  8. #998

    Smeared not Busted

    Quote Originally Posted by GeneChing View Post
    Back when I taught kids, I had a few parents pull me aside and tell me it was okay if I needed to beat their kids for discipline. I never did. Beat your own dang kids. That wasn't what you hired me for.

    Thread: Busted Martial Artists
    Thread: Tae Kwon Do
    There are no details about the "caning", it could have been anything. Sounds like just being whacked with a Shinai which is SOP in many parts of Asia.
    In fact since there are apparently no victims, some nasty people may be taking advantage of current SJW progressive leftist politics or political correctness to smear a personal enemy.

    "It is not part of what taekwondo has as part of its principles, its tenets," said union president Douglas Large. "We do not, as masters and instructors, use corporal punishment."
    I rather doubt that statement to be true in Korea, certainly not taekwondo in North Korea lol.

    Gavras said Jung believes this is a case of his competitors trying to damage his reputation because of his success in producing champions. Jung himself won a bronze medal at the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona.
    Yeah.

    Gavras said Jung's discipline was "entirely in keeping with his cultural tradition and training and the student, having studied in Korea, was fully aware of this and doesn't see it as a problem."
    Yeah.



    No proof of wrong-doing, no charges, no victims, just suspended by people probably intimidated by SJWs.

    Smeared not Busted
    Last edited by wolfen; 03-15-2018 at 12:52 PM.
    "顺其自然"

  9. #999
    Neither the student nor the student's parents complained about the incident
    Over-reaction. This would be a non-story if not for some overzealous, helicopter parenting by proxy.

  10. #1000
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    Jean Lopez

    Olympic taekwondo coach Jean Lopez banned for sexual misconduct with a minor
    Nancy Armour and Rachel Axon, USA TODAY Published 11:56 a.m. ET April 4, 2018 | Updated 9:04 p.m. ET April 4, 2018


    Jean Lopez is the coach for his brother, Steven Lopez, who is taekwondo’s biggest star and the most decorated athlete in that sport. USA TODAY Sports
    (Photo: Eileen Blass, USA TODAY Sports)

    Jean Lopez, the older brother and longtime coach of two-time Olympic taekwondo champion Steven Lopez, has been declared permanently ineligible after the U.S. Center for SafeSport found him guilty of sexual misconduct and sexual misconduct involving a minor.

    The decision reached Tuesday brings resolution to an investigation that began with USA Taekwondo three years ago and was turned over to SafeSport when it opened in March 2017. Three women who spoke with USA TODAY Sports have described sexual misconduct by Jean Lopez dating back to 1997, and one of those women filed a complaint with USA Taekwondo in 2006.

    “This matter concerns a decades long pattern of sexual misconduct by an older athlete/coach abusing his power to groom, manipulate and, ultimately, sexually abuse younger female athletes,” SafeSport said in its decision obtained by USA TODAY Sports.

    “Given the number of incidents reported over a span of several years and by multiple reporting parties, most of whom have no reasonable motive to fabricate an allegation – much less multiple, distinct incidents – of misconduct, the totality of the circumstances clearly shows a recurrent pattern of behavior on the part of Jean."

    More: Lopez brothers, Olympic taekwondo royalty, hit with sex abuse allegations

    More: USA Taekwondo athlete allowed in Rio Olympics training gym after ban for sexual misconduct

    SafeSport published Lopez’s name in its database Wednesday morning, noting the decision is subject to appeal and not yet final.

    Jean Lopez could not be reached for comment Wednesday. George Weissfisch, who served as Lopez’s advisor through the process, did not respond to an email from USA TODAY Sports.

    USA TODAY Sports reported the allegations against Jean Lopez in June, as well as separate allegations of sexual misconduct against Steven Lopez. In an interview with USA TODAY Sports last spring, Steven Lopez denied the allegations.

    Steven Lopez is taekwondo’s biggest star and the most decorated athlete in that sport. He is a five-time Olympian with gold medals in 2000 and 2004 and a bronze in 2008, as well as five world titles.

    USA Taekwondo turned over its investigation of Steven Lopez to SafeSport last year, and the status of his case is unclear. Mandy Meloon, who accused the two-time Olympic champion of rape and physical abuse, said SafeSport investigator Kathleen Smith told her last month that SafeSport was still trying to arrange an interview with him.

    But Wednesday night, Steven Lopez's name was added to the SafeSport database of disciplinary records as having been placed under an "interim measure-restriction" for sexual misconduct. The decision date is listed as June 19, 2017, and SafeSport describes this category as someone whose eligibility "has been restricted pending final resolution of the matter."

    It's not clear what the restriction is referring to; Lopez participated in last year's world championships, which began June 24, as well as this year's U.S. Open and national team trials.

    Lopez, 39, qualified for his 24th national team at trials in February, and he told the Houston Chronicle that he intends to keep competing through the Tokyo Olympics in 2020. He did not immediately return a phone call from USA TODAY Sports on Wednesday night seeking comment.

    Steven Lopez has been coached throughout his career by Jean, who also coached siblings Mark and Diana Lopez to medals in Beijing in 2008. Jean Lopez, 44, coached the U.S. team in four Olympics.

    USA TODAY Sports reported in June that Jean and Steven Lopez were allowed to participate in the 2016 Rio Olympics even though both had been accused of sexual assault and USA Taekwondo had been investigating them for more than a year. USA Taekwondo never held hearings that would have brought a resolution to the cases, but the attorney who conducted the investigation was concerned enough that he alerted the FBI.

    “I am relieved and excited that he will no longer be able to coach young athletes or manipulate girls in these kinds of settings,” said Heidi Gilbert, who accused Jean Lopez of sexually assaulting her in 2003 while they were at a tournament in Germany. “I am highly disappointed in the process. It seems like they handled the situation different for the Lopezes vs. other coaches.

    “It just took way too long,” she added. “But I am relieved. And very excited that no girl is ever going to have to deal with him again.”

    USA Taekwondo had no immediate response, citing its policy of not commenting on active cases. Jean Lopez has until Tuesday to contest the decision through an arbitrator. He has denied all of the allegations, both in interviews with SafeSport and last spring with USA TODAY Sports.

    “I’ve never been inappropriate with anyone,” Jean Lopez told USA TODAY Sports.

    The decision makes Lopez permanently ineligible for membership to USA Taekwondo, which would prohibit Jean Lopez from coaching Steven or any other athlete on the U.S. team.

    Last month, USA Taekwondo announced a collaboration to share information on misconduct issues involving members with Amateur Athletic Union.

    Lopez has spoken at seminars or worked at camps in other countries, including Argentina and Chile. SafeSport’s decision would not bar him from coaching in other countries. That would require a ban by World Taekwondo, and its rules require national federations to report misconduct complaints.

    “The reach of it’s always going to be limited,” said Jon Little, an attorney who sued USA Taekwondo on several occasions and who now represents five women who said they were sexually assaulted by the Lopez brothers.

    “He’s always going to be able to go to Argentina or do something. …They can’t totally stop him from coaching.”

    Jean Lopez has been coaching at a gym in Las Vegas, which touts his Olympic credentials.

    On its website, Legacy Taekwondo says it is the “only taekwondo training center in Las Vegas who can boast instructors that have won and coached Olympic, World and National gold medalist on behalf of the United States of America.”

    The SafeSport decision comes more than a decade after Meloon first told USA Taekwondo in 2006 that Jean Lopez had sexually assaulted her at a tournament in 1997. She was 16 at the time.

    While USA Taekwondo dismissed her claim at the time, SafeSport’s investigation found it to have merit.

    “It’s not only myself personally, everything in the news, the #metoo,” Meloon said. “It wasn’t the right time. It was just so accepted. It was just the way things were, and now it’s just different.”

    SafeSport’s investigation also found Jean Lopez had assaulted Gilbert and a third woman, with whom he had also engaged in a consensual sexual relationship with her starting when she was 17.

    “This is probably one of the worst SafeSport cases I’ve ever seen,” Little said.

    “Literally it went on for two decades. I guess if you’re asking me is there a difference between now and then, the answer is barely. I’m encouraged that the USOC took action against such a prominent person. However, look what it took. It took multiple newspaper stories over multiple years. It took multiple proceedings at the USOC and in other venues. It took police reports to various agencies. It took a lot for a long time for this to end. And the bottom line is that nothing should take this long.”

    The Olympic movement is under heavy criticism for its handling of sexual abuse cases following revelations that longtime USA Gymnastics physician Larry Nassar abused hundreds of women, including Olympic champions Aly Raisman, Simone Biles, McKayla Maroney, Jordyn Wieber and Gabby Douglas. USA Taekwondo, USA Swimming, US Speedskating and USA Judo also have been criticized for how they’ve handled high-profile or wide-spread allegations of abuse.

    In January, the bipartisan House Energy and Commerce Committee asked the U.S. Olympic Committee, USA Gymnastics, USA Taekwondo, USA Swimming and Michigan State to provide information on how they have handled complaints. It has since expanded its inquiry to include all national governing bodies and is awaiting responses.

    The USOC has long maintained it does not have the authority or resources to investigate abuse complaints. Instead, it created the U.S. Center for SafeSport, which is charged with adjudicating all sexual abuse complaints in the Olympic movement.

    When SafeSport opened in March 2017, national governing bodies were told to turn over any pending sexual abuse cases. The complaints against Jean Lopez and his brother were given to the center immediately.
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  11. #1001
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    Toronto police charge four-time Canadian Olympic coach with multiple sex assaults of

    LINK:https://www.thestar.com/amp/news/gta...o-student.html

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    A former head coach with Taekwondo Canada is facing 13 charges related to sexual assault allegations involving a teenage girl he was coaching.

    Toronto police arrested Shin Wook Lim, a four-time coach with Canada’s summer Olympic team, on Tuesday, alleging he sexually assaulted the student over the course of two years, from 2015 to 2017. His charges include six counts of sexual assault, five counts of sexual exploitation, and one count each of invitation to sexual touching and sexual interference.

    Lim, 44, also worked as a coach at Black Belt World, a taekwondo dojo at Bloor St. W. and Ossington Ave.

    Lim has an extensive history with the Canadian Olympic team and coached at the 2004, 2008, 2012 and 2016 Summer Olympic Games.

    He also worked as a youth Olympic team coach in the 2010 and 2014 qualifiers.
    Taekwondo Canada, which represent Canadian athletes for the World Taekwondo Federation, said it is aware of the allegations against Lim.

    “Taekwondo Canada does not tolerate sexual abuse or misconduct, and guarantees that Taekwondo Canada will deal with this extremely serious issue with one very clear goal — protecting our athletes and the integrity of our sport,” the group said in a Wednesday press release.

    The group said Lim has been suspended, and added it will co-operate with the police investigation.

    Tommy Chang, president of Black Belt World Canada on Thursday said the dojo was “shocked” to learn of the charges against Lim. “As always, our first priority is the health, safety and welfare of all of our students.”

    “We have reached out to our students and parents, are fully co-operating with the authorities and will conduct our own investigation into the allegations. We will also closely monitor the legal proceedings. Master Lim has taken an indefinite leave of absence from Black Belt World Canada effective immediately.”

    Lim is scheduled to appear in court at Old City Hall on June 13.

    With files from Claire Floody
    Hung Sing Boyz, we gottit on lock down
    when he's around quick to ground and pound a clown
    Bruh we thought you knew better
    when it comes to head huntin, ain't no one can do it better

  12. #1002
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,048

    Robert James Morrison

    Man pleads guilty in martial arts studio child rape case
    By: Associated Press
    Updated: Aug 20, 2018 - 3:51 PM



    RENTON, Wash. - Authorities say a man has pleaded guilty to child rape in connection with a student at his martial arts studio in suburban Seattle.

    The Renton Police Department said Monday that 43-year-old Robert James Morrison pleaded guilty last week to three counts of rape of a child and two counts of communication with a minor for immoral purposes.

    Police say Morrison was arrested in 2016 after investigation into allegations that he was having sexual contact with some of the underage students at his marital arts studio in Renton.

    Police say a student told investigators that she was 15 when Morrison began having a sexual relationship with her. Police say two other students told investigators that Morrison sent them inappropriate pictures on Snapchat.

    Morrison will be sentenced in September.
    busted with snapchat.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  13. #1003
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    South FL. Which is not to be confused with any part of the USA
    Posts
    9,302

    and there's this guy

    "George never did wake up. And, even all that talking didn't make death any easier...at least not for us. Maybe, in the end, all you can really hope for is that your last thought is a nice one...even if it's just about the taste of a nice cold beer."

    "If you find the right balance between desperation and fear you can make people believe anything"

    "Is enlightenment even possible? Or, did I drive by it like a missed exit?"

    It's simpler than you think.

    I could be completely wrong"

  14. #1004
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    South FL. Which is not to be confused with any part of the USA
    Posts
    9,302
    oh, my...there is a really bad typo in that artical: 'marital' instead of 'martial'

    Police say Morrison was arrested in 2016 after investigation into allegations that he was having sexual contact with some of the underage students at his marital arts studio in Renton.
    "George never did wake up. And, even all that talking didn't make death any easier...at least not for us. Maybe, in the end, all you can really hope for is that your last thought is a nice one...even if it's just about the taste of a nice cold beer."

    "If you find the right balance between desperation and fear you can make people believe anything"

    "Is enlightenment even possible? Or, did I drive by it like a missed exit?"

    It's simpler than you think.

    I could be completely wrong"

  15. #1005
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,048

    marital vs martial

    Quote Originally Posted by Oso View Post
    oh, my...there is a really bad typo in that artical: 'marital' instead of 'martial'
    If I had a dollar for every time I came across this specific typo...

    This and 'King Fu'
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

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