I can give you many examples. I'll give you three.
- A male skater (elite level) who punched a coach (not his coach) and was told "don't do that again" and nothing else. At the same rink, any female skaters who "talked back" to a coach or were perceived as lazy, disruptive, etc would be told to leave the session and not come back to the rink for a week, at minimum.
- A male ice dancer (low level competitive) who didn't want to do skating but had very wealthy parents that insisted he stay in the sport. He went through a series of partners, and every time a partnership broke up, it was always the girl's "fault". In training sessions, if there was a mistake, it was always the girl's "fault" and he would yell at her. Of all the partners he went through, only one partnership ended because the girl's parents refused to let their daughter skate with him any longer. Every other mom & dad let their daughter skate with this guy, some even telling their daughter that she should "stick it out", because they believed his stories about his previous partners not being "good enough" for him. Or they thought, those other girls couldn't handle him, but our daughter is different. He was a terrible skater in addition to being abusive BTW.
- A female skater (national level) who tried out for pairs with a male skater (national level) and then moved across the country to skate pairs with him, only to discover that his previous partner had left because he was so abusive to her. No one told her that before she agreed to skate with him. He cursed at her in practice whenever she did something "wrong", which was often because she was new to skating pairs and was learning. None of the coaches they were working with said anything or asked him to change his behaviour. The breaking point for her was when she landed a SBS jump "wrong" and he yelled at her and kicked her. Again, none of the coaches who witnessed this said or did anything. She quit the next day and moved back home.
And if you're thinking these must be pretty terrible rinks or clubs, all of them have produced national level competitors, and two have produced World and Olympics competitors.