Posts Tagged Sandusky
Jerry Sandusky sentenced to prison in Penn State sexual abuse case – chicagotribune.com
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Law on October 9, 2012
Sandusky gets 30 to 60 years in prison
By Peter Hall, Of The Morning Call
9:25 a.m. CDT, October 9, 2012
BELLEFONTE, Centre County – Jerry Sandusky has been sentenced to 30-to-60 years in state prison for molesting children, closing his chapter in the dark saga of Penn State’s sexual abuse scandal.
The prison term is likely a life sentence for the 68-year-old retired football coach, who was convicted in June of 45 counts of sexually abusing 10 boys between 1994 and 2009.
In a two week trial in Centre County Court, state prosecutors presented the often tearful testimony of eight young men who said Sandusky befriended them through his charity for at-risk kids, earned their trust and brought them intimately into his life.
But the generous father figure with a childlike personality soon revealed himself to each boy as a predator. Starting with uncomfortable touches, Sandusky’s abuse progressed from hugging and fondling to forced oral and anal sex for some of the boys.
Prosecutors also presented the testimony of two eyewitnesses, including former assistant football coach Mike McQueary, who told jurors they saw Sandusky in a Penn State locker room with two young boys on separate occasions.
Sandusky’s lawyers worked to discredit the victims, noting that many had hired lawyers and suggesting that they were contemplating lucrative civil lawsuits against Penn State.
They also used a psychologist’s diagnosis of Sandusky’s histrionic personality disorder to explain “love letters” to one of the victims as an emotionally needy man’s effort to get attention.
After deliberating for two days, the jury of seven women and five men returned guilty verdicts to a packed courtroom late on June 22. A throng of hundreds gathered outside the courthouse in the muggy night roared with excitement as news of the verdict made its way to the street.
Sandusky’s sentencing is by no means the end of the Penn State sexual abuse scandal, which cost legendary head football coach Joe Paterno and longtime university President Graham Spanier their jobs last November.
Defense attorney Joe Amendola said he plans an appeal to win Sandusky a new trial on grounds that the trial judge incorrectly denied his repeated requests for a delay. Cleland rushed the case to trial in only seven months as Sandusky’s defense team struggled to make sense of the mountains of evidence they received, Amendola said.
Two other Penn State administrators await trial in January on charges they lied to the state grand jury that recommended charges against Sandusky.
And McQueary last week filed a lawsuit seeking $4 million from Penn State alleging that administrators’ failure to follow up on his 2002 accusation against Sandusky caused him to appear to share responsibility for Sandusky’s continued abuse. As a result, McQueary can no longer find employment as a college football coach, the suit claims.
Jerry Sandusky sentenced to prison in Penn State sexual abuse case – chicagotribune.com.
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- Sandusky runs risk of sexual assault in prison (sacbee.com)
- Jerry Sandusky professes his innocence, vows to fight (cbc.ca)
- Report: Jerry Sandusky Gets 30-60 Years in Prison in Penn State Child Sex Abuse Case (nesn.com)
- Sandusky speaks out on eve of sentencing (khou.com)
- Sandusky claims innocence as sentencing nears (tracking.si.com)
- Sandusky, victims plan to speak at sentencing (cnsnews.com)
- Sandusky Blames Guilty Verdict on Web of Conspiracy (newser.com)
- Attorney: We won’t challenge Sandusky being classified as sexually violent predator (news.blogs.cnn.com)
- Sandusky professes innocence, vows to fight (utsandiego.com)
Will Penn State Ever be Held Accountable? – NYTimes.com
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Ethics, Law, Legal, Opinion, Perspective, WTF on July 13, 2012
July 12, 2012
Will Penn State Ever be Held Accountable?

Matt Rourke/Associated PressFormer FBI director Louis Freeh spoke about his investigation into the Penn State child sex scandal on July 12, 2012. Freeh said the most “saddening and sobering” finding from his group’s report is Penn State senior leaders’ “total disregard” for the safety and welfare of the child victims.
Since the disclosure of the serial rape, abuse and betrayal of young boys by Jerry Sandusky, lieutenant to the Penn State football coach Joe Paterno, a lot has been said about how shocking and damaging the revelation was to Penn State, its alumni, its football program, Mr. Paterno’s reputation and other irrelevant things.
I never cared much about any of that, or bought the premise that Penn State and its leaders were somehow victims of Mr. Sandusky’s crimes. The only victims were the young boys. A trial, in which Mr. Sandusky was convicted of 45 counts, including rape, revealed that those boys were drawn in by Mr. Sandusky, who pretended to be their mentor and protector. They were attacked by him and then betrayed by every adult and every institution around them.
That point was driven home vividly by the release today of an independent investigation headed by Louis Freeh, the former head of the F.B.I. and former federal judge. It concluded that the most senior leaders at Penn State systematically organized a cover up of Mr. Sandusky’s crimes for over a decade, even though they had strong reason to believe that he was a serial sex criminal.
“The most saddening finding by the Special Investigative Counsel is the total and consistent disregard by the most senior leaders at Penn State for the safety and welfare of Sandusky’s child victims,” the report said. It pointed to Penn State’s president, Graham Spanier, who was forced to resign; the senior vice president for finance and business, Gary Schultz; the athletic director Timothy Curley; and Mr. Paterno, who was fired and later died.
Mr. Schultz was allowed to retire and Mr. Curley was permitted to go on “administrative leave” before they were charged with failing to report allegations of child abuse and for committing perjury before the grand jury investigating the case. I never understood why they were not fired, but Mr. Freeh’s report shows how heightened the sense of self-protection at all costs is at Penn State.
The Freeh report said that these four people “exhibited a striking lack of empathy for Sandusky’s victims.” Actually, it was much worse than that.
Michael McQueary, a junior member of the football staff, reported to Mr. Paterno and other university leaders that he saw h Mr. Sandusky rape a-10 year-old boy in the shower in 2002. They not only failed to try to identify and help the child, or report the case to the police—they actually told Mr. Sandusky what Mr. McQueary saw, putting the boy at great risk.
Since 1990, Penn State, like all educational institutions that receive federal funds, has been legally required by the Clery Act to identify and report crimes committed on campus, particularly sex crimes. The report shows Penn State had utter disregard for that responsibility. It never created a Clery protocol, and obviously had no intention of reporting these crimes.
The law provides for the suspension of federal funds to colleges and universities that fail to abide by its provisions, along with a civil penalty of $27,500 for each infraction.
So, let’s see, that’s 45 times $27,500, which covers only the criminal counts on which Mr. Sandusky was convicted. That gets us to$1,237,500, plus suspension of federal money. The fine will be devastating to the school and certainly harm blameless students and faculty.
But laws have no purpose if they can be so flagrantly disregarded, with such impunity.
Will Penn State Ever be Held Accountable? – NYTimes.com.
Related articles
- Freeh report: The investigation of Jerry Sandusky’s sexual abuse of children implicates Penn State’s top leadership. – Slate Magazine (mbcalyn.com)
- Michael McCann: Freeh Report finds Paterno, PSU leaders concealed Sandusky abuse (sportsillustrated.cnn.com)
- Someone Actually Thinks The Freeh Report Exonerated Joe Paterno, And It’s Bill James [Penn State Scandal] (deadspin.com)
- Report: Penn St. disregarded children’s welfare (espn.go.com)
- Paterno’s legacy may now be damaged beyond repair (mysanantonio.com)
- Freeh Report On Penn State’s Handling Of Sandusky Scandal Set To Be Released (pittsburgh.cbslocal.com)
- Freeh Report Finds PSU Officials Concealed Facts About Abuse (pittsburgh.cbslocal.com)
- Louis Freeh Penn State Report: Alleged Cover-Up Damages Joe Paterno’s Legacy (bleacherreport.com)
- Analysis: FBI Director Louis Freeh, state’s results differ greatly. Why? (pennlive.com)
- Penn State probe accuses Paterno of cover-up|With related stories, videos in Sports (rep-am.com)
Freeh report: The investigation of Jerry Sandusky’s sexual abuse of children implicates Penn State’s top leadership. – Slate Magazine
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Legal, Perspective, Social on July 12, 2012
The Most Damning Verdict
Louis Freeh’s investigation of Penn State reveals two things: Joe Paterno must have known, and former university president Graham Spanier must be held accountable.
Posted Thursday, July 12, 2012

Louis Freeh’s report on his investigation into Penn State’s handling of Jerry Sandusky (pictured above) shows that the university failed to stop the sex offender, who was convicted on 45 counts of abuse in a June trial.
Photograph by Rob Carr/Getty Images
Penn State failed miserably, again and again and at the highest levels, to stop Jerry Sandusky. That’s the conclusion of the independent investigation the university’s Board of Trustees delegated to former FBI director Louis Freeh. His report indicts Penn State’s vaunted football culture, its most powerful officials—including late football coach Joe Paterno and former President Graham Spanier—and doesn’t spare the Board of Trustees either. The report turns cold fact after fact into a bloodbath.
What’s amazing about the factual recitation, in retrospect, is what Freeh calls the “striking lack of empathy” of Spanier, Paterno, former athletic director Tim Curley, and former Senior Vice President Gary Schultz. Freeh is right: The four men failed utterly to think from the point of view of the nameless boys they had to know, on some level of consciousness, were at risk. Instead, the Penn State officials made the terrible mistake of saving their concern for Sandusky. He was the one whom Spanier talked about being “humane” toward—an impulse that kept him and his colleagues from properly investigating the reports of Sandusky’s misconduct in the Penn State showers and referring the whole matter to the police or state child welfare authorities, which is where it belonged.
The Freeh report ascribes much of the Penn State leadership’s behavior to “a culture of reverence for the football program,” calling the athletic department “an ‘island’ where staff members lived by their own rules.” There’s convincing evidence to support these claims. For one, the football program chose not to participate in sexual abuse awareness workshops provided by the university (and the university apparently agreed to exempt the program). Even more damning is the resistance to a comprehensive review of Penn State’s athletic department in November 2011. Regarding the creation of a body to review the school’s sports programs, Penn State general counsel Cynthia Baldwin told Spanier, “If we do this, we will never get rid of this group.” Penn State’s president agreed—the athletic department didn’t want anyone looking over its shoulder, and the university’s leadership was happy to comply, even after the extent of Sandusky’s crimes had become clear.
The scattered evidence that Spanier and his colleagues were thinking first about bad publicity, second about Sandusky, and hardly at all about the children involved, goes back to 1998 and continues up to the moment they lost their jobs. That, of course, followed the indictment of Sandusky for dozens of counts of sexual abuse in 2011. He was convicted of 45 counts last month. Through his lawyers, Spanier still avows that he was never told about the 2001 incident in which assistant coach Mike McQueary said he saw Sandusky rape a boy in the locker room showers. It’s hard to believe him and in some ways it hardly matters.
What comes through, even in the elliptical emails of an administrator who knows better than to write too much down, is their concern about negative attention, legal liability, and pesky oversight committees. Schultz’s handwritten notes from 1998, when he first heard about Sandusky showering with a young boy on Penn State’s campus, ask the following haunting questions: “Is this opening of pandora’s box? … [O]ther children?” Freeh believes that Schultz, Spanier, Paterno, and Curley cared more about their own reputations than the answers to those questions—that “to avoid the consequences of bad publicity, the most powerful leaders at the University … hid critical facts relating to Sandusky’s child abuse from the authorities, the University’s Board of Trustees, the Penn State community, and the public at large.”

Penn State Senior Vice President Gary Schultz’s 1998 note about Jerry Sandusky: “Is this opening of pandora’s box?”
Screenshot from the report of Schultz’s note re: pandora’s box
There is also a telling section about Penn State’s failure to comply with the Clery Act, which Congress passed in 1998 to keep students and parents informed about campus safety. Named for Jeanne Clery, a Lehigh University student who was raped and murdered by a man who went into her dorm at night through unlocked doors, the law requires colleges and universities to report the number of “sex offenses, forcible or nonforcible,” including rape, acquaintance rape, attempted rape, and unwanted fondling or touching, that take place on- and off-campus. The law says schools must disclose all sex offenses reported to local police or “campus security authorities,” and since 1999, the Department of Education has had rules telling schools how to follow these safeguards. Penn State was out of compliance with those rules. Other schools have been, too, to be fair. But the university’s disregard for the Clery Act is telling: Spanier knew little about it. The law is a powerful tool for tracking sex crimes. If Penn State had taken it more seriously, they could have ended Jerry Sandusky’s monstrous reign over his victims years earlier.
One particularly heartbreaking passage in Freeh’s report reveals how Penn State officials allowed Sandusky to continue to operate as a predator. The football coach’s behavior first came to light in May 1998, when the mother of a boy Sandusky showered with on campus reported the Penn State coach to university police. During an interview with a psychologist, the boy said he felt “like the luckiest kid in the world” to attend Penn State games as Sandusky’s guest. “The boy did not want anyone to talk to Sandusky because he might not invite him to any more games,” the report continues.
Even after he retired in 1999, Sandusky used his connections to Penn State to lure victims who wanted to be close to the inner sanctum of Nittany Lions football. Spanier, Schultz, Curley, and Paterno provided the coach the continued visible connection to the program that he needed. In a 1999 article announcing Sandusky’s retirement, Paterno called his former defensive coordinator “a person of great character and integrity”—a description that came after the revered head coach had been clued in that Sandusky was a possible sexual predator.
Joe Paterno lurks in the shadows of the Freeh report, his name invoked repeatedly in communications between Spanier, Curley, and Schultz. Though Paterno is not always in the room when the school’s ostensible leadership meets, his presence is felt. In 1998, for instance, Curley emails Schultz to say that “Coach is anxious” for an update on the initial investigation into Sandusky showering with a young boy.
There is no direct evidence of Paterno’s role in the decision not to report the rape Mike McQueary witnessed. Freeh, though, makes strong insinuations that Paterno was a puppetmaster behind the scenes, quoting a senior Penn State official’s description of Curley as the coach’s “errand boy.” The report states that witnesses “consistently told the Special Investigative Counsel that Paterno … knew ‘everything that was going on.’ ” A janitor who saw Sandusky showering with a young boy didn’t report it, Freeh says, because “football runs the University” and that it “would have been like going against the President of the United States.”
The Freeh report will allow Paterno’s supporters to cling to the belief that the coach played a limited role in the university’s horrific decision-making. But the lack of a smoking gun shouldn’t convince us, as Paterno’s family declares in a statement, that the coach had no fear of bad publicity and was “fooled” by Sandusky. Paterno, like Spanier, Curley, and Schultz, heard enough to know that Sandusky needed to be reported to law enforcement. During his long tenure at Penn State, nothing happened with regard to the Nittany Lions football program that Joe Paterno didn’t want to happen. The school’s abdication of its duties rest in large part on his shoulders.
Graham Spanier, too, bears responsibility for what happened at Penn State. Schultz and Curley are facing charges for lying to a grand jury about the Sandusky investigation. Freeh’s report doesn’t state directly that Spanier should be indicted, too. But that’s the decided implication. Spanier knew enough to suspect Sandusky. As Penn State’s president, he could have spared those kids by picking up the phone and calling the police. He could have done that throughout the years on any number of occasions. He didn’t. He should face the consequences now.
Related articles
- Freeh Report On Penn State’s Handling Of Sandusky Scandal Set To Be Released (pittsburgh.cbslocal.com)
- Penn State Freeh report: Highlights of findings (pennlive.com)
- Analysis: FBI Director Louis Freeh, state’s results differ greatly. Why? (pennlive.com)
- Report: Paterno, other leaders covered for Sandusky (openchannel.msnbc.msn.com)
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- Freeh Report: Joe Paterno exposed as Cowardly Lion (aol.sportingnews.com)
- ABC and corrupt media DISTORT Freeh report on Sandusky. (bellalu0.wordpress.com)
- In the wake of the Freeh Report, Joe Paterno no longer gets the benefit of the doubt (pennlive.com)
- Freeh report on Penn State and Sandusky: complete coverage (pennlive.com)
Jerry Sandusky convicted: His lawyers hint at appeal case basis – CBS News
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Law on June 24, 2012
June 24, 2012 10:19 PM
Jerry Sandusky convicted: His lawyers hint at appeal case basis

Jerry Sandusky’s defense attorney Joe Amendola (CBS News)
(CBS/AP) BELLEFONTE, Pa. – One of Jerry Sandusky’s lawyers, attorney Joe Amendola, says he will not lead the appeals process because he intends to testify as a witness to their ineffective counsel appeal, CBS News has learned.
Earlier, Amendola and others on Sandusky’s defense team said they tried to quit at the start of jury selection in his child sex abuse trial because they weren’t given enough time to prepare, raising an argument on the trial’s speed that could become the thrust of an appeal.
A day after Sandusky’s conviction, his lawyers disclosed Saturday they felt too unprepared to adequately defend him because of how quickly the case was brought to trial. Experts have said the seven months between Sandusky’s November arrest and trial was fast-paced by Pennsylvania standards.
Sandusky’s attorneys raised other issues that could be part of the future appeal, saying a mistrial was sought and denied over a repetition at trial of a brief part of a November interview Sandusky had with NBC’s Bob Costas.
Sandusky was convicted of 45 child sex abuse counts, and one of the jurors said he was swayed by the “very convincing” testimony of eight accusers who said the retired Penn State assistant football coach molested them for years.
Judge denied Sandusky lawyers’ request to resign before trial
Juror: Sandusky appeared to accept his fate
Sandusky may face more charges: Legal analyst

Jerry Sandusky
Jurors in the two-week trial convicted Sandusky of 45 of the 48 counts against him, meaning Sandusky, 68, likely will die in prison.
In addition to raising the likely grounds for their appeal case, Amendola also told CBS News Sandusky’s wife Dottie and his other adopted children were prepared to testify against Matt Sandusky, the adopted son who claimed he had been molested by his father but never took the stand.
Amendola, who said he was going to visit Sandusky in jail sometime this week, also claimed he never prepared his closing arguments. He says he literally stood in the shower and said: “God, help me find the words to defend Jerry as best I can.” He says it was all from the heart.
Jerry Sandusky convicted: His lawyers hint at appeal case basis – CBS News.
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- Sandusky’s son says his father abused him – CBS News (cbsnews.com)
- Sit Yo Azz Down: Sandusky Lawyers To Appeal Convictions (bossip.com)
- Sandusky Lawyers Raise Appeal Issue on Timing – ABC News (abcnews.go.com)
- Sandusky lawyers raise appeal issue (japantimes.co.jp)
- Jerry Sandusky case: Sandusky’s adopted son, Matt, says he is a victim and would have testified, lawyer says (pennlive.com)
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After Sandusky verdict, neighbors release emotions – The Washington Post
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Law, Legal on June 24, 2012
After Sandusky verdict, neighbors release emotions

By ,
In an ordinarily quiet cul-de-sac about 10 miles down the road in Lemont, the triumphant crackle, burst and flare of fireworks lit up Sandusky’s front lawn. His closest neighbors — expressing their collective relief — had cause for celebration, too.

Penn State students and alumni say they stand ready to help the victims in the Jerry Sandusky case, but are also ready to close this chapter and move on.

Jerry Sandusky was convicted Friday of sexually assaulting ten boys, accusations that shattered image of Penn State football and led to the firing of coach Joe Paterno.
Said Paul Kletchka, whose house is next to the Sanduskys’: “It really hit me last night how this has been occupying my thoughts every waking moment. Now, I don’t have to worry about it anymore.”
Sandusky was a revered figure in nearby State College. He was a longtime assistant football coach under Joe Paterno and he founded a respected charity for underprivileged children.
That a jury of his peers determined Friday that Sandusky had used the Second Mile charity to lure victims into his basement bedroom shocked an already divided community.
Karl Rominger, Sandusky’s co-counsel, had stayed up past midnight smoking a cigar and drinking a beer at the Hotel Do-De bar, across the street from the courthouse. He said Saturday morning, in between several television interviews, that the appeals process will vindicate his client.
Rominger said the judge turned down a request by Sandusky’s lawyers to resign from the case on the eve of the trial.
According to Rominger, he and Joe Amendola made a sealed motion as jury selection began saying they had not been given enough time to adequately prepare, but that after discussion in the chambers, Judge John Cleland ruled against them.
“We told the trial court, the Superior Court and the Supreme Court we were not prepared to proceed to trial in June due to numerous issues, and we asked to withdraw from the case for those reasons,” Amendola told the Associated Press.
In Bellefonte, the television crews were mostly gone by 9 a.m. Saturday.
Eric Perryman, the owner and operator of the J & E Guns shop, across the street from the courthouse, said the past week had been business as usual despite all the commotion. He sold several guns throughout the week, he said, including some to out-of-towners here for the trial.
Kathy Sulkowlski, a longtime friend of the Sandusky family, said she was appalled by the jury’s verdict.
“The man I know would never have done this,” she said. “I think he was tried and convicted by the media when this first came out. He didn’t even stand a chance.”
For the time being, Sandusky is incarcerated at the Centre County Correctional Facility, a low-slung brick building with very few windows. It’s on a two-lane road dotted with cornfields and signs that say “DO NOT PICK UP HITCHHIKERS.”
While Sandusky spent his first day behind bars, Paul Kletchka enjoyed Saturday afternoon with his toddler son, playing in the grass next to Sandusky’s home. The neighbors had seen Sandusky’s wife, Dottie, return home in the early afternoon, and the house’s blinds were drawn. They’ve been neighbors for 11 years.
“I kind of feel like as a neighborhood we are over one big hurdle but there are still many to go,” he said.
Inside, his wife, Dana, made a snack for their daughter, a first-grader at Lemont Elementary School. Sandusky’s property backs up to the school’s playground.
“It shakes your foundation,” Dana Kletchka said. “Your town isn’t what you thought it was. Your neighborhood isn’t what you thought it was. We’re looking back and thinking, was there something we should have known? Something we might have missed?”
Strauss, a Pennsylvania State University linguistics professor, spoke to The Washington Post last November but did not allow the paper to quote her by name. She was afraid to speak publicly because tensions were so high in the leafy cul-de-sac.
“There were always rumors around town, pieces of a puzzle about Jerry that you could never put together,” Strauss said. “People would say ‘Keep your boys away from Jerry Sandusky.’ And yesterday that puzzle took a very vivid shape.”
Strauss and the Kletchkas gathered Friday night after the verdict was announced to launch fireworks to ease some of their tensions and also to make a statement.
“It was about us speaking up and going public,” Strauss said. “We have voices now. We’re not being silent anymore.”
After Sandusky verdict, neighbors release emotions – The Washington Post.
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- Jerry Sandusky trial juror: Sandusky ‘knew it was true’ as guilty verdict was read (pennlive.com)
- Jerry Sandusky’s attorneys tried to get out of case because they felt unprepared, Karl Rominger says (pennlive.com)
- Juror: No Doubt on Sanduskys Guilt – Daily Beast (thedailybeast.com)
- Jerry Sandusky’s crimes made verdict easy, juror says (pennlive.com)
- Sandusky Lawyers Raise Appeal Issue on Timing – ABC News (abcnews.go.com)
- Jury finds Sandusky guilty on 45 of 48 counts (espn.go.com)
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- Jerry Sandusky Verdict: Guilty on 45 Counts of Child Abuse (thehollywoodgossip.com)
- Judge denied lawyers’ request – ESPN (espn.go.com)
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Sandusky jury begins deliberations – The Washington Post
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Law, Legal on June 22, 2012
Adopted son accuses Sandusky of abuse

By ,
Matt Sandusky, 33, a foster child before he was adopted by the Sanduskys when he was about 16, attended the trial early on and sat with his mother and family friends. But in recent days, he contacted lawyers who are representing two other accusers.
“During the trial, Matt Sandusky contacted us and requested our advice and assistance in arranging a meeting with prosecutors to disclose for the first time in this case that he is a victim of Jerry Sandusky’s abuse,” attorneys Andrew Shubin and Justine Andronici said in a written statement that confirmed details of a report by NBC News. “At Matt’s request, we immediately arranged a meeting between him and the prosecutors and investigators. This has been an extremely painful experience for Matt.”
The jury, which deliberated in the courthouse Thursday evening and was sequestered in a hotel overnight, did not hear anything in court about the new accusation.
The Washington Post generally does not publish the names of victims of alleged sex crimes. The accusers in Jerry Sandusky’s trial sought to testify under pseudonyms but were required by the judge to use their real names. But reporters covering the trial generally did not use them.
The decision by Matt Sandusky to go public, however, was accompanied by an e-mail from his attorneys to dozens of journalists and news organizations, and his identity has now been widely reported.
The trial went to the jury Thursday after Sandusky’s attorney made a rousing closing argument that portrayed the former coach as a man pursued by overzealous investigators, prosecutors, news organizations and big-city lawyers hoping to cash in on the case.
“The system decided Mr. Sandusky was guilty and the system set out to convict him,” Joseph Amendola, Sandusky’s lead attorney, said in a robust defense of his client. “They were going to get him hell or high water, even if they had to coach witnesses!”
The prosecution alleges that Sandusky turned the charity that he founded, the Second Mile, into a kind of engine for pedophilia. Sandusky is accused of finding boys who needed father figures, cultivating intense relationships, acclimating the boys to physical touching and then ratcheting that behavior into ever more overt acts of sexual abuse.
“You saw the full spectrum of predatory pedophile behavior,” lead prosecutor Joseph McGettigan said in his closing argument.
McGettigan’s presentation was low-key, folksy and rambling, but he ended with a flourish, striding to a spot directly behind Sandusky’s chair, close enough to touch the defendant, and declaring, “He molested, abused and hurt these children. . . . Give him the justice he deserves. Find him guilty of everything!”
The jury’s deliberations could be complicated by the sheer number of allegations. The day began with the judge noting that several of the charges had been dropped, for reasons he didn’t explain. That leaves 48 charges. They include “involuntary deviant sexual intercourse,” “corruption of minors” and “attempted indecent assault on a child under 16.”
The jurors may ponder the significance of letters written by Sandusky to the accuser known in court as Victim 4. The letters were briefly projected on a screen during the trial, and reporters were given a chance to study them more closely Thursday afternoon.
“I write because of the churning in my own stomach when you don’t care. I write because I still hope that there will be meaning to the time we have known each other,” Sandusky, who signed himself “Jer,” wrote in one letter.
In the most tortured letter, Sandusky wrote, “Something or things have come into [Victim 4’s] life that appear to have taken him over. It’s powerful, a cloud of smoke that has engulfed him, for Jer it has been a dark cloud.”
Amendola repeatedly told the jury that the prosecution’s scenario of Sandusky as a pedophile operating in plain sight “doesn’t make sense.”
“Jerry Sandusky took these kids everywhere. Is that what a pedophile does?” the attorney said. “Does he parade the kids around?”
Amendola appealed to local sensibilities as he addressed a jury in which many members have direct connections to Penn State. He alluded to the firing of Graham Spanier, the Penn State president, and Joe Paterno, the legendary coach who was Sandusky’s mentor and who died of complications from lung cancer two months after Sandusky was arrested.
“If he did this, he should rot in jail the rest of his life. But what if he didn’t do this?” Amendola said. “His life is destroyed. Not only his life. We have a fired university president. We have a dead coach.”
But McGettigan said the defense was imagining a vast conspiracy that would have had to master time travel to go back to the 1990s and early 2000s to invent allegations and accusations.
“The conspiracy has everything but Elvis in it,” joked former prosecutor Dennis McAndrews, who attended the trial Thursday and who worked alongside McGettigan years ago.
During the first morning break, the defendant’s wife, Dottie Sandusky, was overcome with emotion and wiped away tears. She did not speak to reporters, and it is unclear if she had heard about Matt Sandusky’s allegation.
Two friends bracketed her in the fourth row of the courtroom seats and put their arms around her shoulders. Together they closed their eyes, and the three of them appeared to be praying.
“She’s hangin’ in there. She’s got a lot of faith, but we’re praying with her,” said Kathy Sulkowski, a family friend who has known Jerry Sandusky for 45 years and has attended the trial daily.
Sandusky jury begins deliberations – The Washington Post.
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- Sandusky case goes to jury… (pennlive.com)
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- Jerry Sandusky’s Adopted Son: I’m a Victim, Too (people.com)
- Sandusky jury deliberates as new abuse alleged (reuters.com)
- Adopted son of Jerry Sandusky claims abuse – Boston.com (bostonglobe.com)
- Son says Sandusky abused him; case goes to jury (cbssports.com)
- Jerry Sandusky’s adopted son says father abused him (mercurynews.com)
Sandusky Angry He’s Not Going To Be Allowed To Tell The Tender, Romantic Side Of The Story | The Onion – America’s Finest News Source
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Humor/Parody, The Onion on June 21, 2012
Sandusky Angry He’s Not Going To Be Allowed To Tell The Tender, Romantic Side Of The Story

BELLEFONTE, PA—As jurors began deliberations Thursday on charges that he sexually abused 10 boys over a 15-year period, former Penn State coach Jerry Sandusky—who did not testify during his trial—expressed regret over being denied a chance to tell “the sweet, loving, tender, and romantic part of the story” that he felt the jury had a right to hear.
“Everything they’re saying happened is just wrong,” Sandusky told reporters while awaiting a verdict. “The sordid stories about the locker room shower, the terrible testimony about what happened in my basement… None of these things really expresses the depth and intensity of my feelings as I opened my heart of hearts to these kids.”
“I have no idea why [defense attorney] Joe [Amendola] didn’t want me to talk about that stuff,” Sandusky added. “What we had together, those boys and I, was truly special to me.”
Sandusky faces 48 criminal counts in the trial, and the jury heard from eight alleged victims—now ages 18 to 28—who said the coerced sexual contact with the former defensive coach ranged from kissing to fondling to showering together to forced oral and anal sex. Sandusky said he was surprised and disappointed none of the boys mentioned the beautiful, special times he tried to share with them.
“Maybe it was just me, all along,” said Sandusky, burying his face in his hands. “Oh, God, it was, wasn’t it? I can’t believe I let myself fall for the oldest trick in the book. I’m such a fool.”
Prosecutors have called him a predator who used gifts and the draw of Penn State football to target boys with unstable family lives, a charge Sandusky said completely neglects the emotional side of his “very caring and giving” relationship with at least 10 troubled youths.
Although many of the 28 witnesses called by the defense vouched for his reputation, Sandusky noted that not one of them mentioned the sweeping, epic passion between him and his alleged victims—the tender moments and the establishment of deep, lasting emotional bonds he said are vital to an understanding of events.
“I’ve been forced to sit here and listen to my special memories of those nights in the showers be reduced to a series of wet rhythmic slapping sounds,” Sandusky said. “Nothing about the way the steam made it a little wonderland, the elemental mood lent by the running water, the way I trembled—nothing. They made me sound like some sort of monster. I simply don’t understand anything about this.”
Sandusky maintained that had he been allowed to give testimony regarding his soaring, once-in-a-lifetime romance with several boys between 8 and 17, the jury would have been forced to admit that what he and the young men had was one for the ages.
“My lawyer said the jury wouldn’t care about my emotions, about what I once felt for them or my heartbreak over what’s become of us now,” Sandusky said. “I guess in that way the jury’s a lot like those boys are, huh? Because they don’t care either, I guess. It’s like they want to see me get hurt for some reason.”
“I’m devastated, to be honest. I thought what we had was real. But it seems it was nothing more than sex to them,” added Sandusky, his voice cracking as he shook his head. “Well, live, love, and learn, I always say. I guess that’s just how kids are.”
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- Sandusky Son’s Bombshell (thedailybeast.com)
- Sandusky’s son says his father abused him – CBS News (cbsnews.com)
- Following closing arguments, jurors begin deliberations in Sandusky trial (cbssports.com)
- Jerry Sandusky’s son says his father abused him (newsday.com)
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Joe Paterno Should Retire | breezespeaks
Posted by Michael B. Calyn in Opinion, Sports on November 7, 2011

Joe Paterno Should Retire
Posted on November 7, 2011 by breezespeaks
This weekend, Penn State and their fabled coach Joe Paterno, JoPa to the Nittany Lion faithful, found themselves enmeshed in a pedophilia scandal that could, and should, rock their world.
Jerry Sandusky, a former coach and player for JoPa, has been charged with forty counts of risk of injury to a minor, and faces possible life imprisonment. The incident that has raised the most questions occurred in the shower area of Penn State’s locker room, and was witnessed by a graduate assistant, who promptly reported the sordid affair to JoPa himself. JoPa in turn told his Athletic Director, Tim Curley, of the allegations against Mr. Sandusky. From there, another school administrator, Gary Shultz, was conferred with, and then the school did nothing. They just dropped the ball, allowing the sleaze bag Sandusky to continue abusing kids for another nine years.
Both Mr Curley and Mr Shultz were arrested and charged with perjury for not coming forward in 2002 when the original accusations were made. They should both go to jail, directly to jail. They should not pass go, and they should not collect $200.00.
As to JoPa - who has supposedly run a clean, morally upright program at Penn State for these many years - he has not been charged with any wrongdoing. But why not? JoPa is Penn State. He doesn’t answer to the AD, the AD answers to him. How did he react when he ran into Scumbag Sandusky in and around Penn State’s facilities, which Sandusky supposedly had at his disposal? Why didn’t he follow-up on the charges? Why has it taken ten years for this scandal to be uncovered? What, if anything, was JoPa thinking?
If you were in a shower area, and you found an old man having sexual relations with a young boy, what would you do? Would you ignore it? Or would you go straight to the police? I think most would go to the police. But when larger issues come into play, in this case the Penn State athletic program, priorities become skewed. The people involved in the cover-up didn’t want their school presented in a bad light, so they buried the information. The same thing has happened with the Catholic Church through the years. It seems that when the institution is bigger than the individual, it has priority. Heads should roll.
The first head should be JoPa’s. This 85-year-old living legend had the power to address this issue in 2002. He could have contacted the proper authorities instantly and had this mess cleaned up in no time flat. Instead he chose to pass the buck and ignore the obvious. How can he now claim the moral high ground when he has shown such poor judgement himself? He has not set a good example for his “student athletes.” (My new favorite oxymoron.) He should announce today that this will be his last year at Penn State, and step down as gracefully as he can, given the circumstances. The only thing stopping me from calling for his instant resignation is his iconic status, and his age. As of now, he is the winningest coach in college football history, but his legacy will be marred by this scandal, no matter how many more games he wins. Announce today, JoPa, that you are going to do the right thing, which you failed to do in 2002, and maybe your image will not be tarnished as badly as I believe it will be if you try to weather this storm.
Joe Paterno Should Retire | breezespeaks.
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