Forgive me, I can not copy/edit/paste, so I will just bold my response. Yes, I'm referring to Bridget (Isn't she the topic of this thread?). She said she was abused for two years, which I would assume the last two years of her partnership with him, in which she would be 16 and 17, which is legal in New Jersey.
You seem overly focused on whether or not statutory rape happened. You don't have to be raped to be abused. It's really only relevant if the justice system wants to press charges. It's not relevant to whether or not Couglin abused Bridget.
Since people seem confused, let's get some definitions out there.
Grooming: manipulating someone into doing something they wouldn't normally do and don't really want to do. It is accomplished by building an emotional connection with someone for the purpose of getting them to do things you want them to and they don't. Usually used in the context of sexual abuse but you can groom people to do non-sexual things as well. Such as when adults convince teenagers to kill someone or to steal things.
Abuse: the improper use of something, to treat a person or animal cruelly or inappropriately (dictionary definition)
Note there doesn't have to be rape to be abuse and there doesn't even have to be violence. People can be abused emotionally. (i.e., by being gaslighted) and not just beat up or forced to have sex.
they have the right to grieve his passing and express this if they feel the need
Just because someone can do a thing, doesn't mean they should.
Maybe figure skating really is for people with common sense completely bred out of them.
It's a chicken and egg sort of thing but IME the elite side of the sport definitely turns people who seem normal to begin with into crazy people. Whether or not they were pre-disposed to be crazy is hard to know. And definitely crazy people seem to be attracted to the sport and often thrive in it: As in the parents of 4 year olds who are screaming at them during practice because they think their kid is going to the Olympics some day.
In my era, 18-year-old guys dating 15-year-old girls was not abnormal. Everyone said boys mature more slowly than girls as an explanation. At 15, I had a 19-year-old boyfriend; I remember sitting with him on a hill at camp listening to the Vietnam draft lottery....he got a bad number and was very upset.
No we didn’t sleep together, and maybe I’d look back on it differently if we did. By today’s standards it was wrong, but not back then.
By today's standards it is not wrong. There are plenty of relationships like this now.
What is wrong is when one person with more power manipulates the other. People seem to have trouble distinguishing between the fact that there was an age difference and the fact that there was a power differential and are focusing on the ages. It's not just the ages that are a concern. It's that the younger party had less power and says she was groomed.
Or to put it neutrally, if all A's are B's, it doesn't mean that all B's are A's.
Or as
@VIETgrlTerifa says:
I have a feeling it's not just the age difference with both partners being of high school age and older that is causing Bridget to look at her experience with John as a traumatic one. The fact that there are multiple women coming out and he was being investigated due to at least three unrelated reports tell me something as well.
On a different note....
Regarding skaters needing to apologize, I think the problem I am having is that a lot of these skaters of getting a disproportionate amount of blame because people are angry at the actions of John Coughlin and then the likes of Delilah Sappenfield and Tara Modlin and others who were aggressively attacking the accusers. The amount of conflating actions and treating skaters who were not involved and were only reacting to the news that hit them like a mack truck over someone they knew personally as if they themselves committing the crimes, hiding it, and then cursing them out by those who if you look at their social media posts look like people with some real axes to grind and get off on "teaching people" I believe reeks of something less-than-admirable and is NOT the way to go if you really want restorative justice.
But two wrongs don't make a right.
There is no reason that a skater who posted a RIP post back then couldn't post a "Bridget, I think you are brave" (or something else supportive) post now.
Whether others are batshit crazy is irrelevant to what the skaters should do. Plus, if someone is harassing them, they can block those people from their social media and/or ignore them. In fact, they should do that IMO no matter what else is at issue.