Judge Denies Larry Nassar's Appeal For New Sentence

Larry Nassar and Judge Rosemarie Aquilina during his sentence hearing on Jan. 24 in Lansing, Michigan. She denied a motion to appeal his prison sentence of 40 to 175 years on Aug. 3. (Photo: JEFF KOWALSKY / AFP / Getty Images)
Larry Nassar and Judge Rosemarie Aquilina during his sentence hearing on Jan. 24 in Lansing, Michigan. She denied a motion to appeal his prison sentence of 40 to 175 years on Aug. 3. (Photo: JEFF KOWALSKY / AFP / Getty Images)

Larry Nassar, the former USA Gymnastics and Michigan State University team doctor imprisoned for serial child sexual abuse, has been denied his motion to appeal his sentence.

“There’s nothing I’ve done that prejudices me on this case,” Judge Rosemarie Aquilina told Nassar’s attorneys in court Friday morning. “Your motion is denied.”

Nassar and his attorneys filed a motion to appeal his sentence last week, claiming that Aquilina, who presided over Nassar’s first, widely covered sentence hearing in January, was biased against him. Also, he blamed Aquilina for a recent assault he said he endured at the hands of other inmates at the United States Penitentiary in Tucson, Arizona, where he is serving part of his sentence.

Aquilina sentenced Nassar to 40 to 175 years in prison on seven counts of child sexual abuse after a weeklong sentencing hearing during which 169 of his victims and victims’ and family members read powerful impact statements.

“At this point, justice cannot be served in terms of the appearance of impropriety,” Nassar’s attorney Malaika Ramsey-Heath said. “Dr. Nassar has the right to continue this process. This case is not over. It did not end upon conviction. The appellate process must be allowed to take place.”

Ramsey-Heath pointed to Aquilina’s recent appearance at the ESPY Awards, her public support for sexual abuse survivors on her social media accounts and media interviews before the appeal process took place as evidence of her bias against Nassar.

Michigan’s chief deputy attorney general, Laura Moody, argued that Aquilina used “strong but appropriate language” throughout the January sentence hearing. She added that if Nassar was attacked in prison, “it’s because he’s a convicted child molester,” not because of anything Aquilina said during sentencing.

Kyle Stephens reads the first victim impact statement during Nassar’s sentence hearing, Jan. 16, in Lansing, Michigan. (Photo: Scott Olson / Getty Images)
Kyle Stephens reads the first victim impact statement during Nassar’s sentence hearing, Jan. 16, in Lansing, Michigan. (Photo: Scott Olson / Getty Images)

Aquilina, who presided over the appeal hearing, spoke for 20 minutes before handing down her decision to deny the appeal.

“Your briefs claim that I had my mind made up. That I didn’t need to listen to anybody, that I was biased,” Aquilina addressed Ramsey-Heath. “You’re in fact wrong, and you’re not a mind reader.”

Aquilina said she “did the math” and broke down how she got to a minimum of 40 years for Nassar’s sentence.

“I’m doing this because I clearly want you to understand this took a lot of thought and no bias and no prejudice,” she said. “If I gave him ... 25 years divided by seven counts means 3.57 years [for each victim]; 30 years divided by seven counts is 4.28 years; 35 years divided by seven counts is five years per count; 40 years divided by seven counts is 5.71 years.”

During the January sentencing, Aquilina responded passionately to every person who read an impact statement. Her poise and empathy caught the attention of the entire country.

At one point during the sentencing, she suggested that she would have been open to letting people do to Nassar what he did to his victims if it weren’t unconstitutional.

“Our Constitution does not allow for cruel and unusual punishment,” she said at the time. “If it did, I have to say, I might allow what he did to all of these beautiful souls ― these young women in their childhood ― I would allow some or many people to do to him what he did to others.”

Aquilina delivered a now iconic statement when she handed down Nassar’s sentence, saying, “Sir, I’m giving you 175 years, which is 2,100 months. I just signed your death warrant.”

Moody argued that Aquilina’s death warrant comment was “just fact,” not bias.

Aquilina ended the appeal hearing on a powerful note, telling Nassar’s attorney before handing down her decision, “So, bias? No. Justice? Yes.”

Nassar is accused of sexually assaulting more than 260 athletes under the guise of medical treatment. He’s serving three concurrent prison sentences of up to 175 years for sexual assault and child pornography.

Related Content

Larry Nassar Sentenced To 40 To 175 Years In Prison For Child Sexual Abuse

Read The Judge's Powerful Remarks In Larry Nassar's Sentencing

There’s A Line Between Justice And Vengeance. Larry Nassar’s Judge Crossed It.

Larry Nassar Blames Judge For Prison Assault, Files Appeal For New Sentence

Love HuffPost? Become a founding member of HuffPost Plus today.

This article originally appeared on HuffPost.