Tag Archives: suicide

Ex-USA Gymnastics coach John Geddert’s suicide was an ‘escape from justice’: former gymnast

John Geddert’s suicide was an “escape from justice” and “traumatizing beyond words,” said Sarah Klein, a former gymnast who trained under the U.S. Olympic coach.

Geddert died by suicide Thursday after Michigan authorities announced several charges against him, including human trafficking. Geddert was the U.S. Olympic coach for the 2012 team that won a gold medal in London with a team that included Jordyn Wieber, Gabby Douglas, Aly Raisman, Kyla Ross and McKayla Maroney.

“His suicide is an admission of guilt that the entire world can now see,” Klein, who is now a lawyer, said Thursday.

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Geddert had ties to Larry Nassar, the disgraced sports doctor who was convicted of sexually assaulting several gymnasts under the guise of medical treatment. Prosecutors said that charges against Geddert had nothing to do with the Nassar case, though Nassar treated gymnasts at the coach’s gym.

Prosecutors filed charges against Geddert, a former U.S. Olympics gymnastics coach with ties to disgraced sports doctor Larry Nassar. Geddert was head coach of the 2012 U.S. women’s Olympic gymnastics team, which won a gold medal. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens, File)

Rachel Denhollander, the first gymnast to accuse Nassar of sexual abuse, tweeted she was proud of those who levied accusations at Geddert.

“So much pain and grief for everyone,” she wrote. “To the survivors, you have been heard and believed, and we stand with you.”

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USA Gymnastics said late Thursday that the charges against Geddert would “lead to justice through the legal process.”

“With 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 today’s events,” the statement read.

July 31, 2012: U.S. gymnasts, left to right wearing red, Gabrielle Douglas, McKayla Maroney, Alexandra Raisman, Jordyn Wieber and Kyla Ross celebrate with coaches Jenny Zhang, front left, Mihai Brestyan, back left, John Geddert, center, and Liang Chow, right, after their team won the gold medal for the Artistic Gymnastics women’s team final at the 2012 Summer Olympics, in London.
(AP)

The 63-year-old was charged with first- and second-degree criminal sexual assault, 20 counts of human trafficking, forced labor, six counts of human trafficking of a minor, forced labor, operating a criminal enterprise and lying to police in the Nassar investigation.

Prosecutors acknowledged that the human-trafficking charges were uncommon use of Michigan law.

“We think of it predominantly as affecting people of color or those without means to protect themselves … but honestly it can happen to anyone, anywhere,” Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel said. “Young 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.”

Nessel added: “It is alleged that John Geddert used force, fraud and coercion against young athletes that came to him for gymnastics training for financial benefit to him. The victims suffered from disordered eating, including bulimia, anorexia, suicide attempts and self-harm, excessive physical conditioning, repeatedly being forced to perform, even when injured, extreme emotional abuse and physical abuse, including sexual assault.”

Geddert was allowed to surrender himself to authorities but never showed up. Nessel’s spokeswoman Kelly Rossman-McKinney said there had been “no indication” that he was going to harm himself.

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Geddert’s body was found at a rest area on Interstate 96, police said.

“This is a tragic end to a tragic story for everyone involved,” Nessel added.

If you or someone you know is having thoughts of suicide, please contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255).

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Former U.S. Olympic gymnastics coach dies by suicide after he was charged with human trafficking and sex crimes

A former U.S. Olympic Gymnastics coach died by suicide Thursday after he was accused of physically abusing dozens of his young female athletes and committing at least one sexual assault, Michigan’s attorney general said. John Geddert, 63, was expected to turn himself in Thursday afternoon.

“My office has been notified that the body of John Geddert was found late this afternoon after taking his own life,” Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel said in a statement. “This is a tragic end to a tragic story for everyone involved.”

Michigan State Police said Geddert’s body was found at the rest area off an interstate in Clinton County at 3:24 p.m. His death is under investigation. 

When asked why Geddert was allowed to turn himself in instead of being arrested, a representative for Nessel’s office said that it was “standard procedure” and that they 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,” the representative said.  

Geddert coached the 2012 Olympic team to a gold medal, and formerly owned a USA Gymnastics club in Michigan. 

Prosecutors filed 24 criminal charges against Geddert on Thursday: 14 counts of human trafficking, forced labor causing injury; six counts of human trafficking of a minor for forced labor; one count of continuing criminal enterprise; one count of first-degree criminal sexual conduct; one count of second-degree criminal sexual conduct; and one count of lying to a peace officer during a violent crime investigation.

In court documents accompanying the announcement, prosecutors allege that Geddert engaged in “sexual penetration” of a minor between the ages of 13 and 16 in January 2012. He is also accused of engaging in “sexual contact” with a minor in the same age range during the same time period. 

John Geddert seen in 2012.

Kathy Willens / AP


In explaining the human trafficking charges, the attorney general’s office alleged that “Geddert’s treatment of young gymnasts constitutes human trafficking as he reportedly subjected his athletes to forced labor or services under extreme conditions that contributed to them suffering injuries and harm.”

“Geddert then neglected those injuries that were reported to him by the victims and used coercion, intimidation, threats and physical force to get them to perform to the standard he expected,” the office said.

The office also alleged that Geddert made “false or misleading” statements to authorities investigating Larry Nassar, who worked as Geddert’s team physician for approximately 20 years. Nassar, who was convicted of molesting women at Geddert’s facility, is serving decades behind bars for child pornography crimes and molesting young athletes. The office said Geddert’s charges are unrelated to its wider investigation at Michigan State University.

USA Gymnastics said in a statement that “we had hoped that news of the criminal charges being brought against John Geddert would lead to justice through the legal process,” adding, “With 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 today’s events.”

Sarah Klein, a gymnast who said she trained with Geddert for more than 10 years, said, “John Geddert’s escape from justice by committing suicide is traumatizing beyond words. He tortured and abused little girls, myself included, for more than 30 years and was able to cheat justice.”

Klein said in a statement that Geddert was “a narcissistic abuser,” and said “his suicide is an admission of guilt that the entire world can now see.” 

“As a survivor and a mother of two young girls, my only comfort is in the knowledge that I can rest my head on the pillow every night knowing that John Geddert will never terrorize and abuse another child,” she added. 

Costanza Maio and Erica Scott contributed reporting. 

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Why did a crazed gunman take his own life in a remote upstate N.Y. town after a cross-country killing spree?

Nestled within the foothills of the Catskill Mountains rests the sleepy village of Roscoe, New York, one of the premiere fishing destinations in the country. Anglers from around the globe come here to explore its pristine waters, some in search of the elusive “two headed trout” of local legend.    

But recently, this bucolic setting has become the backdrop of a multistate manhunt for a cold-blooded killer, Roy Den Hollander, 72, whose cross-country killing spree ended on a dirt road just north of Roscoe’s Beaverkill River. 

“This is Trout Town USA,” says local stylist Brie Tallman, “things like this don’t happen here.”

Roy Den Hollander

Tallman recalls the melee that unfolded on July 20, 2020, as investigators from the FBI and New York State Police descended on the tiny hamlet after highway patrol located Den Hollander’s body along Ragin Road, dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head. Officials quickly identified him as the prime suspect in a deadly attack at the home of the Honorable Esther Salas, New Jersey’s first Latina federal judge.

“It was definitely something huge,” Tallman says. “We had a mystery going on that everyone was trying to solve.”

Investigators pieced together the timeline of what preceded the gruesome roadside scene in Roscoe, discovering that the now dead New York City attorney and self-described anti-feminist had begun his macabre expedition days earlier in the San Bernardino Mountains east of Los Angeles. On July 11, posing as a deliveryman, Den Hollander drove to the home of rival men’s rights lawyer, Marc Angelucci, and shot him dead on his front porch.

One week later, on the opposite side of the country, Den Hollander showed up at the New Jersey home of Judge Salas, who had presided over one of his many frivolous lawsuits against what he perceived as male gender discrimination. Again, posing as a deliveryman, he opened fire, killing Salas’s 20-year-old son, Daniel Anderl, and critically injuring Salas’s husband, attorney Mark Anderl.

CBS News correspondent Tracy Smith reported on this case for “48 Hours” in “The Deliveryman Murders.”

Law enforcement sources tell CBS News that Angelucci’s address, as well as a FedEx envelope addressed to Judge Salas, were found inside the killer’s car located in Roscoe. Investigators believe Den Hollander targeted Angelucci and Salas because of his perceived grievances against them both, and say a .380 caliber handgun located next to his body connects him to all three victims.

According to New York State Police Captain Brian Webster, investigators on scene said Roy Den Hollander’s death appeared to be a suicide. But when they looked in the car, they found a FedEx envelope addressed to Judge Esther Salas and an address to a residence in San Bernardino County, California. 

New York State Police


But it remains unclear why he chose the remote part of Upstate New York to end his life after destroying the lives of innocent others.

Writings posted on Den Hollander’s website reveal the Sullivan County spot is where his family spent summers during his childhood. In the 1950s, his parents purchased a plot of land along Ragin Road and built a cabin, only a few thousand feet from where he committed suicide.

“He knew it was a safe haven,” says Tallman. “It’s kind of the perfect place to hide, I think.”

As a lifelong resident of Roscoe, Eric Hamerstrom knew of Den Hollander as a young boy. “Back then, some of the kids here called him ‘Babyface.'” Like most children their age, they spent their summers swimming under the covered bridge.

“We would see him almost every day going down to the beach,” Hamerstrom says. “All I can imagine is that he must have had enjoyable times here as a kid.”

Den Hollander wrote that he and his older brother, Frank, would wander the woods with other young boys getting into mischief, and later, in their teens, chase girls.

“If you’re going to end your life, where are you going to go?” asks Les Mattis, who lives across from Den Hollander’s former cabin. “You’re not going to do it in the middle of New Jersey on some highway. Here you’ll be in a place where maybe as a kid you felt safe and at home.”

Standing along the banks of the Beaverkill River, it’s hard to imagine a more idyllic setting to grow up, and yet a manuscript written by Den Hollander and discovered by investigators, part memoir, part manifesto, didn’t detail nostalgia for simpler times. To the contrary, Den Hollander’s reflections on his childhood recounted a dark and tortured past that may explain his motivation for returning to the northern woods.

“He was an unusual and unstable person,” says FBI special agent Joe Denahan. “One of the themes that we saw was, he was very angry.”

“As his own words made clear, his motives, his unfulfilled desires, his unmet needs, had nothing to do with women,” says Joe Serio, who knew Den Hollander in Russia in the 1990s. “They had everything to do with his childhood, and everything to do with one particular woman: his mother.”

In Den Hollander’s rambling, 1,700-page self-published book titled “Stupid Frigging Fool,” he rants about his abject contempt for his mother, to whom the book is dedicated: “To Mother, May She Burn in Hell.”

“She didn’t love him or even like him,” says Serio. “According to him, she regretted him, and let him know it.”

“From the age of 5 or 6 until I was a teenager,” Den Hollander writes, “she often hollered at me that she should have listened to my father and never had me.” That vicious statement, he claims, was repeated throughout his childhood.

He recounts how his mother blamed him for all the ills in her life and claims that she even tried to poison him as a child. An examination of his writing reveals the wounds of a deeply traumatic childhood. So why then would he choose to return to the origins of such pain and suffering?

“If I were writing a novel about this story,” says Serio, “I would have his character return to the place he apparently hated most in order to thumb his nose at his mother, who so often did the same to him. Regardless of how discounted one might have felt in life, when there’s nowhere left to go, that symbol from early years — the home — may be the only place that harkens.”

It was revealed that in his final days, Den Hollander had been facing terminal cancer. Out of time and at the end of his rope, he ended his life with a bang, alone on the side of a dirt road, haunted by his memories and demons. Perhaps that is all he had left.  

“Death’s hand is on my left shoulder,” he wrote. “The only problem with a life lived too long is that a man ends up with so many enemies he can’t even the score with all of them.”

There is no publicly known evidence that Den Hollander harmed anyone else, but inside his car, investigators were unnerved to find a list of more than a dozen names, including several judges, whom authorities suspect were potential targets. 

“Thank goodness he didn’t come here to shoot more people,” says Mattis. “I was just glad that he had no scores to settle up here.” 

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Parents sue Robinhood after son commits suicide believing he owed $730K

The parents of a 20-year-old man who committed suicide after mistakenly believing he owed $730,000 to Robinhood plan to file a wrongful death suit against the stock-trading app, according to a report.

University of Nebraska student Alexander Kearns, who had begun dabbling in trading, ran into problems on June 11 when the app put a hold on his account showing that he was $730,000 in the red and that he needed to pay over $170,000 in the coming days, CBS News reported.

“He thought he blew up his life,” Alex’s dad Dan Kearns said in an interview with the network. “He thought he screwed up beyond repair.”

Kearns had been trading options, rather than stocks, so the negative balance was probably a temporary amount that showed until the options settled to his account.

There was no customer service number for Kearns to call and while he did email Robinhood three times, he only received a automatic response that the app would get back to him when they could, noting a possible delay in replies, the report said.

The next day on June 12, Kearns killed himself by stepping in front of an oncoming train.

He left behind a suicide note that said, “How was a 20-year-old with no income able to get assigned almost a million dollars worth of leverage?”

Kearns’ mom, Dorothy Kearns told the outlet that she “lost the love of my life.”

“I can’t tell you how incredibly painful it is. It’s the kind of pain that I don’t think should be humanly possible for a parent to overcome,” the distraught mother said.

Ironically, the app got back to the amateur trader the day after his suicide, saying, “Great news! We’re reaching out to confirm that you’ve met your margin call and we’ve lifted your trade restrictions.” according to the report.

Dan said that the app should have stronger checks in place to screen for trader experience.

“How are those guardrails? How does that — how does that stop an 18-year-old from making risky trades that they don’t really understand?” Dan told CBS referring to a screener question that allows someone to trade even if they respond that they don’t have much experience.

In the suit expected to be filed Monday, the parents said Robinhood “must be held accountable,” according to the news site.

“The information they gave him was just incredibly skewed and possibly completely wrong,” said Benjamin Blakeman, the Kearns family lawyer.

“Because they make it look like you owe $730,000 when you really don’t owe anything,” Blakeman told the outlet. “That could panic just about anybody.”

Another lawyer for the family, Ethan Brown, told CBS, “they provide no mechanism through a telephone call, through live email service, to get live answers to questions.”

The Kearns said their son just wanted answers and help, the report said.

Robinhood told CBS of the changes they had made since Kearns’ devastating death, including adding instructions and educational materials for options trading and adding screening for experience for riskier trades.

They also now have a call back option from a live agent and a mechanism in place to escalate emails like the one that Kearns sent, the outlet reported.

“We remain committed to making Robinhood a place to learn and invest responsibly. Our mission is to democratize finance for all,” a spokesperson for the app told CBS.

“We designed Robinhood to be mobile-first and intuitive, with the goal of making investing feel more familiar and less daunting for an entire generation of people previously cut out of the financial system,” the statement continued.

Robinhood has recently came under fire when it stopped people from buying shares of GameStop and other stocks that exploded in a market frenzy last month.

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Andrelton Simmons says depression, thoughts of suicide led to decision to opt out last week of Los Angeles Angels’ season

Shortstop Andrelton Simmons says that depression and thoughts of suicide led to his decision to opt out during the last week of the Los Angeles Angels’ 2020 regular season, telling the Orange County Register that “the idea of finishing the season in a bubble was too much for me to handle.”

Simmons, who recently finalized a one-year, $10.5 million contract with the Minnesota Twins, chose to share his story in writing, through a series of Twitter direct messages, instead of verbally, because “it is still difficult to articulate certain things or be open.”

The Angels announced on Sept. 22 that Simmons had opted out of the final five games of the regular season. No additional information was provided, though Simmons said in a statement that he felt it was “the best decision for me and for my family.” At the time, the Angels remained mathematically in the race for the second wild card and second place in the AL West. Although their chances of reaching the postseason were slim, league rules required that potential playoff teams begin quarantining that week in preparation for upcoming playoff games.

“It was tough for me mentally to where the thought of suicide crossed my mind,” Simmons told the Register. “It was something I vowed a long time ago I would never consider again. I was fortunate to talk to a therapist, which helped me let go of those thoughts. At the end when a lot of people were still going through what most would think of as tough times, the idea of finishing the season in a bubble was too much for me to handle.”

Simmons played in just 30 games during the abbreviated regular season, missing time due to an ankle he injured for a third straight summer. He told the Register it was difficult to focus on baseball when so many people were struggling amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

“First time was driving through Oakland and seeing some of the shops and restaurants trying to stay open with all the homeless people camping outside,” he said. “That’s when it really hit me.”

Simmons began communicating with a therapist, but his hesitations about entering a playoff bubble persisted.

“I was really saddened by how much I was hearing about the death toll, and seeing how smaller businesses were going out of business and I was a little depressed at how the effects of all the new rules and fears were gonna affect people’s livelihoods and how disconnected people were becoming,” he said.

Simmons told the Register he wasn’t forthcoming about his reasons for opting out at the time “because I don’t like the idea of having to explain every detail of my life” and “was afraid of people judging and people twisting my story.” But he said he changed his mind when he realized that being open about his situation could help others who are struggling.

Information from ESPN’s Alden Gonzalez was used in this report.

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