A former U.S. Olympics gymnastics coach with ties to disgraced sports doctor Larry Nassar killed himself Thursday, hours after being charged with turning his Michigan gym into a hub of human trafficking by coercing girls to train and then abusing them.
John Geddert faced 24 charges that could have carried years in prison had he been convicted. He was supposed to appear in an Eaton County court, near Lansing, but his body was found at a rest area along Interstate 96, according to state police.
โThis is a tragic end to a tragic story for everyone involved,โ Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel said.
Nessel earlier announced that Geddert wasย chargedย with a bushel of crimes, including sexual assault, human trafficking and running a criminal enterprise. The charges wereย the latest falloutย from the sexual abuse scandal involvingย Nassar, a former Michigan State University sports doctor now in prison.
Geddert, 63, wasnโt arrested and transported to court. Rather, Nesselโs office allowed him to show up on his own.
โWe had no indication that Geddert intended to flee or hurt himself or others. We had been in contact with his attorney and were assured of his cooperation,โ Nessel spokeswoman Kelly Rossman-McKinney said.
Calls seeking comment from attorney Chris Bergstrom werenโt immediately returned.
Geddert was head coach of the 2012 U.S. womenโs Olympic gymnastics team, which won a gold medal. He was long associated with Nassar, who was the Olympic teamโs doctor and also treated injured gymnasts at Twistars, Geddertโs Lansing-area gym.
Among the charges, Geddert was accused of lying to investigators in 2016 when he denied ever hearing complaints about Nassar. But the bulk of the case against him involved his gym in Dimondale and how he treated the young athletes whose families paid to have them train under him.
The charges against Geddert had โvery little to doโ with Nassar, said Assistant Attorney General Danielle Hagaman-Clark.
Geddert was charged with using his strong reputation in gymnastics to commit a form of human trafficking by making money through the forced labor of young athletes.
โThe victims suffer from disordered eating,โ Nessel said, โincluding bulimia and anorexia, suicide attempts and attempts at self harm, excessive physical conditioning, repeatedly being forced to perform even when injured, extreme emotional abuse and physical abuse, including sexual assault.
โMany of these victims still carry these scars from this behavior to this day,โ the attorney general said.
Nessel acknowledged that the case might not fit the common understanding of human trafficking.
โWe think of it predominantly as affecting people of color or those without means to protect themselves … but honestly it can happen to anyone, anywhere,โ she said. โYoung impressionable women may at times be vulnerable and open to trafficking crimes, regardless of their stature in the community or the financial well-being of their families.โ
Geddert was suspended by Indianapolis-based USA Gymnastics during the Nassar scandal. He told families in 2018 that he was retiring.
USA Gymnastics said in a statement late Thursday that news about the charges against Geddert would โlead to justice through the legal process.โ
โWith the news of his death by suicide, we share the feelings of shock, and our thoughts are with the gymnastics community as they grapple with the complex emotions of todayโs events,โ the organization said.
On his LinkedIn page, Geddert described himself as the โmost decorated womenโs gymnastics coach in Michigan gymnastics history.โ He said his Twistars teams won 130 club championships.
But Geddert was often portrayed in unflattering ways when Nassarโs victims spoke during court hearings in 2018. Some insisted he was aware of the doctorโs abuse.
Sarah Klein, a gymnast who trained under Geddert for more than 10 years and was assaulted by Nassar, said the coachโs death was an โescape from justiceโ and โtraumatizing beyond words.โ
โHis suicide is an admission of guilt that the entire world can now see,โ said Klein, a lawyer.
Rachael Denhollander, the first gymnast to publicly accuse Nassar of sexual abuse in 2016, said she was proud of the women who stepped forward against Geddert.
โSo much pain and grief for everyone,โ she said on Twitter after his death. โTo the survivors, you have been heard and believed, and we stand with you.โ

