Sport Integrity Australia has appointed its own integrity officer to the peak body of ice skating to oversee a spate of complaints involving the sport.
SIA chief executive David Sharpe said on Tuesday that others within the skating world had come forward to detail their own concerns, following the news that Australian Olympic figure skater Brendan Kerry had been permanently barred from competing in the US for allegedly engaging in sexual misconduct with a minor.
Australian skating authorities are now investigating the events that led the US Centre for SafeSport to impose the ban. Kerry – a three-time Olympian – said he is innocent of the allegation and would appeal the ban, which will trigger an independent arbitration.
Sharpe confirmed that SIA had requested details from SafeSport regarding its investigation and the subsequent banning of Kerry, but could not comment further.
SafeSport was established by US Congress in 2019 to investigate allegations of misconduct within Olympic and Paralympic sports, following the US gymnastics abuse scandal. It is the country’s peak body for investigating abuse in sport.
Amid the investigation into Kerry, other Australian skaters have come forward with their own complaints. James Min, a two-time national silver-medallist figure skater, called out the sport last month in a statement.
“I’m beyond sick and tired of nothing being done to protect the safety of children in this sport, and it’s about time changes are made. There have been too many incidences now,” he wrote on Facebook.
“I myself am a victim of grooming by an adult … However, I didn’t receive the support and protection I needed during this time. I spent a lot of my career as an athlete suffering internally and not being able to reach out to anyone. Or when I did reach out, no one could provide me with the help I needed.