No matter his sentence, Larry Nassar will never get out of prison - CNN

Larry Nassar will never get out of prison, no matter his sentence this week

Judge: I'd allow what he did to be done to him
Judge: I'd allow what he did to be done to him

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Judge: I'd allow what he did to be done to him 02:40

(CNN)Serial child abuser and former USA Gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar will be sentenced to a lengthy prison sentence on Tuesday or Wednesday, and he could face as many as 125 years in prison.

But the exact length of the sentence he receives in this case may be moot. The 54-year-old has already been sentenced to 60 years in prison for federal child pornography charges. He also faces a further prison sentence from Judge Janice Cunningham in Eaton County, Michigan, where he has pleaded guilty to three counts of criminal sexual conduct.
Judge Rosemarie Aquilina, who will decide Nassar's sentence in Ingham County court in Michigan for his guilty plea to seven counts of criminal sexual conduct, promised the doctor's victims he won't leave prison.
"This is about your healing and his demise," Aquilina said last week to one of the victims sharing her impact statement in court. "It doesn't matter how you slice it. Between the three of us judges, he isn't going to see the light of day, and the next judge he sees -- now that he's seen the federal judge, me, soon Judge (Janice) Cunningham -- will be God."
"Shutting the door on him is a prison door," Aquilina said on Friday after a powerful victim impact speech. "He's not coming out between the three sentences that he will get. So you shouldn't be scared anymore."
Instead, the focus of his sentencing has been on Nassar's victims and their powerful testimony of his abuse, as well as the systems of power that protected and enabled him.
Nassar has been in Ingham County court since last Tuesday, as scores of women have detailed the ways in which he used his power as a trusted doctor to molest underage girls at USA Gymnastics and Michigan State University for more than two decades.
"I ask you to give Larry the strongest possible sentence which his actions deserve, for by doing so you will send a message to him and to other abusers that they can not get away with their horrible crimes," Olympian Aly Raisman said in her victim impact statement.
"They will be exposed for the evil they are, and they will be punished to the maximum extent of the law. Let this sentence strike fear in anyone who thinks it is okay to hurt another person. Abusers, your time is up. The survivors are here standing tall, and we are not going anywhere."
As of Tuesday, 149 victims or victims' families had spoken, and a total of 158 are expected, prosecutors said.