The State House finished its investigation into how Michigan State University handled the Larry Nassar scandal.
It made recommendations based on their review of thousands of documents as well as Michigan State University's responses to 50 detailed questions.
Lawmakers detail what they call systemic failures at MSU. Some of which involve failed investigations, medical records missing, and loopholes in policy.
The document is included to the right of this article.
According to the report since 2014 at least 243 survivors reported abuse by Nassar to the MSU Police Department - most of them were minors when they were molested.
Medical records were never kept for many of Nassar's so called "treatments." MSU lacked an informed consent policy and did not require a chaperone to be present during sensitive treatments which Nassar methodically exploited.
The report also says MSU used biased medical experts in a botched 2014 investigation into a sexual assault complaint against Nassar. One of the four experts used was recommended by Nassar himself - and two by Nassar's former boss William Strampel.
Lawmakers say the school "defiantly and wrongly maintains it did not mishandle this investigation." The report lists dozens of recommendations to stop abuse like this from happening again. They'll be introducing a bipartisan package of bills soon.