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Penn State scandal: Jerry Sandusky, pedophile?

Curt James

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Nov 7, 7:49 PM EST

Penn State sex scandal engulfing revered Paterno

By MARK SCOLFORO and MARC LEVY
Associated Press

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) -- Joe Paterno, major college football's oldest, winningest and perhaps most revered coach, was engulfed Monday in a growing furor over the alleged cover-up of a sex abuse scandal at Penn State.

The Pennsylvania state police commissioner said Paterno fulfilled his legal requirement when he relayed to university administrators that a graduate assistant had seen former assistant coach Jerry Sandusky attacking a young boy in the team's locker room shower in 2002. But the commissioner also questioned whether Paterno had a moral responsibility to do more.

On the Happy Valley campus and in the surrounding town of State College, some were even asking whether the 84-year-old coach should step down after 46 years on the sidelines.

Two Penn State officials, Senior Vice President Gary Schultz and Athletic Director Tim Curley, surrendered on charges that they failed to alert police to the complaint about Sandusky, Paterno's former defensive coordinator and one-time heir apparent.

Schultz and Curley are also charged with lying to the state grand jury that indicted Sandusky on charges of sexually abusing eight boys over 15 years. Both stepped down from their posts Sunday, Curley taking a temporary leave and Schultz retiring. They appeared Monday in a Harrisburg courtroom, where a judge set bail at $75,000. They weren't required to enter pleas.

Pennsylvania Attorney General Linda Kelly said Paterno is not a target of the investigation into how the school handled the accusations. But she refused to say the same for the university president, Graham Spanier.
"All I can say is again, I'm limited to what's contained in the presentment, and that this is an ongoing investigation," Kelly said.

State police Commissioner Frank Noonan said that although Paterno may have met his legal requirement to report suspected abuse by Sandusky, "somebody has to question about what I would consider the moral requirements for a human being that knows of sexual things that are taking place with a child."
He added: "I think you have the moral responsibility, anyone. Not whether you're a football coach or a university president or the guy sweeping the building. I think you have a moral responsibility to call us."

At a news conference, Noonan and Kelly were peppered with questions about whether Paterno was given details about what graduate assistant Mike McQueary - now the team's wide receivers coach - saw on the night of March 1, 2002.

The grand jury report said McQueary was in the locker room that night to put away some new sneakers when he heard "rhythmic, slapping sounds" and looked into the showers.


He reportedly saw a naked boy, about 10 years old, with his hands against the wall as Sandusky subjected him to anal sex. McQueary left immediately and first contacted his father before calling Paterno the next morning and then meeting at Paterno's home.

Exactly what was said during that meeting is unclear from the grand jury record, which states that Paterno called Curley the next day to tell him McQueary had seen Sandusky "in the Lasch Building showers fondling or doing something of a sexual nature to a young boy."

Paterno released a statement Sunday in which he said he was not told "the very specific actions" contained in the grand jury report, but that McQueary had seen "something inappropriate involving Mr. Sandusky."

"If this is true we were all fooled, along with scores of professionals trained in such things, and we grieve for the victims and their families," said Paterno, who has not spoken publicly about the matter.

The indictment also cited a 1998 incident in which an 11-year-old boy's mother called university police to complain after learning that her son had showered with Sandusky. A state Department of Public Welfare investigator told the grand jury that Sandusky said he showered naked with the youth and hugged him, "admitted that it was wrong," and promised not to shower with any child again.

Kelly would not say whether Paterno or the university president knew of that investigation.

"All I can say is that investigation was handled by Penn State University's police department," Kelly said. Penn State police said they were not releasing any information about the 1998 investigation.

Sandusky retired in 1999 after learning that he would not be Paterno's successor as head coach.

Kelly and Noonan encouraged anyone who would accuse Sandusky of sexual assault to step forward and talk to police, with Kelly specifically asking that the child reportedly assaulted by Sandusky on March 1, 2002, call detectives.

Paterno has long had an image as a leader who does things by the book and runs a program that has seen far fewer major scandals than other major college football teams. Doubts about his judgment in handling the Sandusky matter quickly began to emerge.

Facebook users, including those on a newly created group called "Joe Paterno should resign," expressed outrage and disappointment in Paterno. Many said Paterno should have gone to police after the 2002 incident.

At Rinaldo's Barber Shop in State College, hair cutter Lori Schope said she believes Paterno shares responsibility.


"He passed the buck," she said. "Anybody that says they knew about it and didn't do anything about it is complicit."

Advocates for priest-abuse victims saw parallels in how the university and the Roman Catholic church handled similar problems.

"Here we are again," said John Salveson, former president of the Pennsylvania chapter of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. "When an institution discovers abuse of a kid ... their first reaction was to protect the reputation of the institution and the perpetrator."

"They didn't even try to find out the identity of the kid that was being raped in the shower," he said. "Their solution to this was to not let Sandusky into the shower anymore. It's just stunning to me that no one called the police."

Sandusky was described by Keith "Kip" Richeal, co-author of his autobiography "Touched: The Jerry Sandusky Story," as a loving father of six adopted children

"I hope to God it's not true because I admire the man very much," Richeal said. "All I saw was Jerry was kind to kids of all ages, including the students he dealt with."

Sandusky has maintained his innocence, his lawyer said Saturday.
At Sandusky's two-story brick house at end of a cul-de-sac about five minutes from campus, a State College police car was parked in the driveway for a time Monday. An officer said police had been asked to keep people off the property, which included a neatly trimmed lawn with a pumpkin at the front.

Schultz, 62, and Curley, 57, are innocent and will seek to have the charges dismissed, their lawyers said. Curley's lawyer, Caroline Roberto, called the case weak, while Schultz's lawyer, Tom Farrell, said the men did what they were supposed to do by informing their superiors of the accusations.

"You folks may have seen Mr. Paterno's statement," Farrell told reporters. "Mr. Paterno's statement matches their statement. They were given a general allegation of inappropriate conduct. That's what Mr. Paterno told them, that's what Mr. Paterno told you folks yesterday, that's what he testified to in the grand jury, and that's what these gentlemen testified to in the grand jury."

Sandusky continued to use the school's facilities after retirement for his work with The Second Mile, a foundation he established in 1977 to help at-risk kids. The charges against him cover the period from 1994 to 2009.
The allegations against Sandusky range from sexual advances to touching to oral and anal sex. The young men testified before the state grand jury that they were in their early teens when some of the abuse occurred; there is evidence even younger children may have been victimized.

Buffalo Bills safety Bryan Scott, a three-year starter at Penn State from 1999-2002, said he was roommates with Sandusky's son John and had heard from mutual friends that the younger Sandusky was "just completely devastated."

"How can you not be? Your dad being accused of these allegations," Scott said.

He said he was praying that the charges against the former assistant coach were not true. "If it is, my thoughts and prayers are on the victims and on the victims' families," he added.

On College Avenue, the street running in front of the Penn State campus, the scandal - and who bears responsibility - was a popular topic of conversation.

"It's uncomfortable for us, because we know a lot of the people involved," said Rebecca Durst, who owns Rinaldo's Barber Shop.

"I don't think there's an easy solution," Durst said. "Damage has been done to a lot of people."

Anthony Vecchio, working on a street improvement project nearby, agreed. In any other job, he said, a boss would be held responsible if he or she didn't report wrongdoing by an employee.

"He's the boss, he's the head coach," Vecchio said. "He should know what's going on beneath him."

No matter what happens, Durst said the scandal has left a permanent stain on Penn State and the community.

"Happy Valley is not going to be Happy Valley anymore," she said.

AP writers Maryclaire Dale in Philadelphia and Nancy Armour in State College contributed to this story.

News from The Associated Press
 
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YouTube Video

Investigators on Monday encouraged anyone who would accuse former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky of sexual assault to step forward and talk to police. (Nov. 7)

YouTube Video

AP College Football Writer Ralph Russo talks about how Penn State head coach Joe Paterno's legacy might be hurt by the scandal. (Nov. 6)

YouTube Video

The sex abuse scandal involving former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky took another turn on Saturday as the schools Athletic Director was charged with perjury. (Nov. 5)
 
sex abuse? sounds like that 10 year old boy was straight up raped, they shouldn't sugar coat these kinds of crimes..wtf is a 10 year old boy doing on a college campus to begin with? I spent a decade in college and never once saw a child on any campus in 3 different states when it wasn't a visiting day or something.
 
sex abuse? sounds like that 10 year old boy was straight up raped, they shouldn't sugar coat these kinds of crimes..wtf is a 10 year old boy doing on a college campus to begin with? I spent a decade in college and never once saw a child on any campus in 3 different states when it wasn't a visiting day or something.

Apparently it was during a youth program on campus. A youth program initiated by the perpetrator, the alleged rapist!
 
Every man in this who didn't lynch this guy needs to have their manhood snipped off at the root...

If I had caught ol dude in the shower doing that the 10 year old would be traumatized twice once by the pederast and once by seeing me violently smashing the pervs head against the tiles in the bathroom.,. How could he have just left the kid to continue to get raped? Had it been a little girl would he have done the same?
 
Had I seem something like that and not done anything, then called my dad he would have disowned me, probably would call the cops on the perv and then tracked me down to kick my ass. What world do these people fucking live in?
 
ok, this deserves sodomy with a very large very sharp stick. vlad the impaler style.
 
BUCKWHEATS For Everybody
 
I was never a Penn State fan, but it looks like Joe will not "go out on top."

But seriously, its pretty disgusting. And, how many of these incidences go on, that we don't even know about elsewhere.

And this kiddy fiddler rapist, Sandusky certainly has abused more children than we know of.
 
I was never a Penn State fan, but it looks like Joe will not "go out on top."

But seriously, its pretty disgusting. And, how many of these incidences go on, that we don't even know about elsewhere.

And this kiddy fiddler rapist, Sandusky certainly has abused more children than we know of.
You're probably right
 
Who the hell walks in a shower, see the raping of a
10 yr old that's in progress and just walks out.
This mutha fuq'r is just as bad as the rapist
for not stopping this shiate!
WTF! He should be charged as well.
I'm sorry to say but why did Joe Pa not suspend
the guy with pay until a investigation is completed.
 
Who the hell walks in a shower, see the raping of a
10 yr old that's in progress and just walks out.
This mutha fuq'r is just as bad as the rapist
for not stopping this shiate!
WTF! He should be charged as well.
I'm sorry to say but why did Joe Pa not suspend
the guy with pay until a investigation is completed.

I would have probably beat that old man to death...at the minimum broken both his arms and legs
 
NY Times: Paterno getting his ass kicked to the curb

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. ??? Joe Paterno???s tenure as coach of the Penn State football team will soon be over, perhaps within days or weeks, in the wake of a sex-abuse scandal that has implicated university officials, according to two people briefed on conversations among the university???s top officials.

The board of trustees has yet to determine the precise timing of Paterno???s exit, but it is clear that the man who has more victories than any other coach at college football???s top level and who made Penn State a prestigious national brand will not survive to coach another season. Discussions about how to manage his departure have begun, according to the two people.

Paterno was to have held a news conference Tuesday but the university canceled it less than an hour before it was scheduled to start.

At age 84 and with 46 seasons as the Penn State head coach behind him, Paterno???s extraordinary run of success ??? one that produced tens of millions of dollars for the school and two national championships, and that established him as one of the nation???s most revered leaders, will end with a stunning and humiliating final chapter.

Jerry Sandusky, a former defensive coordinator under Paterno, has been charged with sexually abusing eight boys across a 15-year period, and Paterno has been widely criticized for failing to involve the police when he learned of an allegation of one assault of a young boy in 2002.

Additionally, two top university officials ??? Gary Schultz, the senior vice president for finance and business, and Tim Curley, the athletic director ??? were charged with perjury and failure to report to authorities what they knew of the allegations, as required by state law.

Since Sandusky???s arrest Saturday, Penn State ??? notably its president, Graham Spanier, and Paterno ??? have come under withering criticism for a failure to act adequately after learning, at different points over the years, that Sandusky might have been abusing children. Newspapers have called for their resignations; prosecutors have suggested their inaction led to more children being harmed by Sandusky; and students and faculty at the university have expressed a mix of disgust and confusion, and a hope that much of what prosecutors have charged is not true.

On Monday law enforcement officials said that Paterno had met his legal obligation in alerting his superiors at the university when he learned of the 2002 allegation against Sandusky. But they suggested he might well have failed a moral test for what to do when confronted with such a disturbing allegation involving a child not even in his teens. No one at the university alerted the police or pursued the matter to determine the well-being of the child involved. The identity of that child remains unknown, according to the Attorney General.

Paterno has not been charged in the matter, but his failure to report to authorities what he knew about the 2002 incident, in which Sandusky allegedly sexually assaulted a young boy at Penn State???s football complex, has become a flashpoint, stirring anger among the board members and an outpouring of public criticism about his handling of the matter.

In recent days Paterno has lost the support of many board members, and their conversations illustrate a decisive shift in the power structure at the university. In 2004, for instance, Paterno brushed off a request by the university president that he step down.

Paterno came to Penn State in 1950 as a 23-year-old assistant coach making $3,600 a year. He planned to stay for two seasons, to pay off his student loans from Brown University, where he earned a degree in English literature.

He became the head coach in 1966, and he has been widely credited with helping spearhead the Penn State football program and the rest of the university from a local enterprise into a national brand. Along the way, Beaver Stadium grew to 108,000 seats from 29,000 and Penn State???s endowment grew from virtually nothing to more than $1 billion.

What separated Paterno from many of his coaching peers until this week was that he did this with few questions about how he grew the program. Penn State???s lofty graduation rates and education-first ideals, known as Paterno???s Grand Experiment, became as synonymous with the program as its plain uniforms and dominating defenses.

Paterno led Penn State to national titles in the 1982 and 1986 seasons, and he complemented the on-field success with the reputation of a throwback sideline professor, whose tie, thick glasses and black Nike coaching shoes became as predictable in Northeast autumns as the changing foliage.

Paterno???s reach on campus extended well beyond the football program. He and his wife, Sue, have donated more than $4 million to the university. On campus, everything from an ice cream flavor at the Creamery to a library now bears his name.

???There???s no individual in the entire 120- or 130-year history of the university that has had a greater impact on the institution than Joe Paterno,??? Larry Foster, a former trustee and a president of the alumni association, told The New York Times in 2004. ???He???s just reached into so many areas.???
 
2003 Profile On Sandusky???s Work With Second Mile: "It???s Like He Was Put On This Earth To Work With Kids."

By A.J. Daulerio
November 8, 2011

On November 14, 2003, Penn State's Collegian published an article about Jerry Sandusky's dedication to The Second Mile. In retrospect, the piece reveals just how tragically oblivious some of the volunteers and directors of the organization were about their founder at that time. We've compiled some of the quotes from the article, "Coach still teaches in game of life," below:

  • Leslie Wilson, assistant director for programs at Second Mile: "I am just overwhelmed at how hands-on Jerry is, and I think he is more involved now than I think he ever was... He has his hands in every event and you can see his real passion for what he believes in, he takes everyone in as family."
  • More from Wilson: "I can go on all day about how I feel about Jerry as a person because he is so great for the kids," Wilson said. "It's like he was put on this earth to work with kids. I don't know if I have ever met another man that was as caring and as compassionate with children as he is."
  • "If asked, Sandusky gladly attends games or other activities in which his Second Mile children are involved. Through volunteering at local high schools in the region, he is able to keep his head in the game and spend some extra quality time with some of his friends from the program."
  • Jeremy Fegert, assistant director of programs at Second Mile: "Most people work from 9 to 5, but Jerry has a year-long job... He always has a kid from The Second Mile with him or around him. It is amazing how he gives everything he has for the things that he believes in."
  • Fegert, again: "It is really great to see him interacting with the kids and being an active part in what he has created."
Remember: The first complaints about Sandusky's relationship with children associated with The Second Mile occurred in 1998. This article was published five years later.
 
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NY Times: Paterno getting his ass kicked to the curb

Everyone involved should be fired without pension or financial payment or severance whatsoever.

Paterno, Spanier, Curley, Shultz, and McQueary? ****-can them all.
 
I didn't think anybody would get the reference...

I've had things to do in denver in my netflix que for over a year now, doesn't seem like they are ever getting it. don't know why
 
Mothers of two of Jerry Sandusky's alleged victims lash out at Penn State officials' handling of scandal

By Sara Ganim, The Patriot-News
November 07, 2011

He was the last victim, that we know of, to come forward. But in many ways, he was the first. He was one of the first with enough courage to say something. To stick around for three years while police and a grand jury talked to dozens of people and combed through thousands of documents.

To hang on emotionally. To take a stand against a Goliath. A legend. A man that some saw as a god. He was the first to be believed. Authorities even call him Victim One.

The mother of the Clinton County boy is telling her family story. It???s a story that launched a three-year grand jury investigation that resulted in sexual assault charges against former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky, allegedly involving eight boys.

???I???m very proud of him,??? the mother said of her son, on the brink of adulthood and at the heart of what some are calling the biggest scandal in college sports. ???He???s a brave kid,??? she said. ???And his major concern in the whole thing was for anybody else. That was his big thing. He said, ???I just don???t want this to happen to anybody else.??????

And now he knows that he???s not alone.

Ten years before he came forward, another child, now 24, had also spoken up. He wasn???t believed. Allegations he made against Sandusky about touching during a shared shower at Penn State in 1998 never resulted in charges.

Sandusky, through his attorney, denies all the charges. Attorney Joe Amendola, said Sandusky attributes the allegations to troubled kids who are acting out.

???I???m so upset,??? said the mom of the 24-year-old, who authorities are calling Victim Six. ???My son is extremely distraught, and now to see how we were betrayed, words cannot tell you. To see that Graham Spanier is putting his unconditional support behind Curley and Shultz when he should be putting his support behind the victims, it just makes them victims all over again.???

She???s talking about the perjury and failure-to-report charges filed against former Penn State athletic director Tim Curley and resigned Vice President of Business and Finance Gary Schultz.

Prosecutors allege the administrators ignored a 2002 report from a graduate assistant ??? identified by sources as Mike McQueary ??? that he saw Sandusky having sex with a young boy in a shower.

McQueary, now an assistant coach for the Nittany Lions football team, went to his father first, then to coach Joe Paterno.

???I don???t even have words to talk about the betrayal that I feel,??? said the mom of Victim Six.

???[McQueary] was a grown man, and he saw a boy being sodomized ... He ran and called his daddy????


As media from around the country descended on Happy Valley on Monday to dig into the allegations and the details of a possible cover-up, the two mothers decided to talk to The Patriot-News.

Both said they don???t want their sons??? stories to get lost in the scandal.

Victim One

Victim One met Sandusky through the Second Mile ??? a charity for needy children that Sandusky started ??? and quickly got drawn into his world of big-time college football: gifts, trips, sporting events, and hanging out with a guy who seemed to be loved by everyone.

But his mother said it came at a price.

The Patriot-News will not identify either women or their sons in keeping with our policy not to name victims of sexual assault. The mother of Victim One specifically asked that other media respect her request for no more interviews.

She brought the psychologist who has been helping her son cope with the trauma to the interview.

Almost from day one, psychologist Michael Gillum has met regularly with the boy and counseled him through the protracted police investigation.

A few weeks before her son broke down and confessed to a principal at Central Mountain High School in Clinton County that he was being molested by Jerry Sandusky ??? a volunteer football coach at his high school ??? his mother began to suspect something was wrong.

First, it was because her son was acting out. When she grounded him, she said Sandusky demanded he be able to ???take care of it.???

???I said, ???No way, he???s my kid,?????? she said.

Then, her son began asking her about an online database for ???sex weirdos.???

???You don???t want to just accuse people of that,??? the mother said. ???I called the school principal and the guidance counselor and said, if nothing else, he???s taking my son out of classes. He???s leaving the school with him. ... So I asked them to call him into the office and ask [my son] how he felt.

???They did call him to the office that day and I remember [the principal] was in tears and she said, ???You need to come here right away.??????

Her son, then 15, broke down and told them what happened.

???They told me to go home and think about what I wanted to do, and I was not happy,??? she said. ???They said I needed to think about how that would impact my son if I said something like that. I went home and got [my son] and we came to [Children and Youth Services] immediately.???

Officials at Central Mountain High School have said they immediately reported the abuse, and Attorney General Linda Kelly praised them for doing the right thing.

The boy???s story would evolve over the next few weeks as he was interviewed by police. That???s not atypical for sex cases involving teens, Gillum said.

???It???s essentially peeling back the layers of an onion,??? Gillum said. ???Because it???s so humiliating. It???s so much mental anguish. ... They typically want you to know something inappropriate happened, then there was a progression where boundaries were violated.???

But sometimes it takes time for the victim to get it all out.

That???s something Sandusky???s attorney Joe Amendola points to in defense.

He said it appears someone coaxed this victim into embellishing his story because it changed from groping to more graphic sex acts.

Gillum called it a typical defense tactic.

"They will imply ... that I must have led the witness,??? he said. ???But when you???re specialized in children and adolescent child abuse, you???re trained to make sure you wouldn???t compromise the evidence.???

Victim Six

Victim Six cried when he read the 23-page grand jury presentment released Saturday, his mother said. And not for himself.

???He had no idea how bad it was,??? she said. ???He was lucky. He only had that one contact with him.???

It allegedly happened in May 1998, following a tour of the football locker rooms. Her son and another boy, both 11, shared a shower with Sandusky.

When he got home he said, ???If you???re wondering why my hair is wet, we took a shower together,??? and ran into his room, his mom recalls.

She called police.

But after a six-week investigation that included the mother confronting Sandusky in her home as police listened in the other room, Sandusky was cleared.

Then-Centre County District Attorney Ray Gricar decided there wasn???t enough evidence.

???And you???re going to tell me that Spanier and Paterno weren???t informed of something that was that huge that Ray Gricar was in on it but Spanier was kept in the dark???? she said. ???I???m just not that stupid. I???m so upset I just can???t believe it.???

Paterno???s son, Scott, has said that lawyers for Penn State assured him his father was never told about the 1998 report ??? investigated by university police.

It???s unclear from the presentment if Spanier knew. However, Schultz, who was in charge of the police force, acknowledged knowing about it.

When the mother confronted Sandusky, he said: ???I understand. I was wrong. I wish I could get forgiveness. I know I won???t get it from you. I wish I were dead,??? according the presentment from the grand jury.

An investigator for Children and Youth Services broke the news to the mother: It was all a big mistake, the mother said she was told. The police officer who investigated won???t comment. Neither will the former police chief.

???Jerry Sandusky admitted to my face, he admitted it,??? the mother said. ???He admitted that he lathered up my son they were naked and he bear-hugged him. If they would have done something about it in 1998, and then again in 2002 ??? there was two chances they dropped the ball and I think they should all be held accountable.???

Her son, she said, can???t stop thinking about Victim One.

???That poor child,??? she said. ???My heart is like breaking for this boy and his family. And what about all the boys we don???t know about? They could have all been saved.???

The only semblance of comfort their family has had in the last three days is from community support.

???At last, my family and I are believed,??? she said. ???Because they tried to make my son and the other boy out to be liars.???

Every day was a struggle

Finding the courage to come forward was supposed to be the hardest part.

???We expected you just arrest people who do stuff like that,??? Victim One???s mom said. ???We didn???t realize it was going to be this difficult and take this long.???

The three-year investigation eventually ended with a grand jury finding that Sandusky had eight victims ??? two of them had long-term relationships with Sandusky and six involved shared showers in Lasch Building at Penn State, which houses the football program.

???I am upset that it took this long, but I also realize that the more people they find, the less impact it???s going to have on my son ... and it???s only going to help everybody else,??? the mom said.

Hearing that he wasn???t alone was a challenge of emotions for her son.

???He wasn???t happy that it happened to somebody else,??? she said.

But in a way, there was some relief: more chance that he would be believed.

It was very hard to keep their cool, to keep the allegations a secret, and not talk to anyone. But they did it.

When the arrests were announced Saturday, and the family learned that two Penn State officials had known about a prior incident and didn???t report it to police, she flipped out.

???I???m infuriated that people would not report something like that,??? she said. ???I still can???t believe it. I???m appalled. I???m shocked. I???m stunned. There???s so many words. I???m very mad. They could have prevented this from happening.???

Her son has accused Sandusky of four years of abuse, and it started not long after Curley and Schultz were notified of a abuse report in 2002.

The attorney general has said their inaction allowed Sandusky to molest this boy.

His mom said he knows that.

???He???s very angry,??? she said. ???I just can???t fathom how anybody could do that. When I read the indictment, I was very shocked that there was so many people that didn???t do anything ... and there had to be more people covering it up, I think, for him to get away with it for this long.???

When her son first came forward, every day was a struggle. There was this overwhelming feeling of deception. Sandusky was supposed to be a role model.

???In the beginning, it was extremely upsetting. I was so shocked. It got so bad we didn???t know what to do,??? she said. ???[He] is really, really afraid of Jerry. He told me numerous times when he started backing away from him, you just can???t tell him no. I said, why not????

Her son replied, ???You just don???t do that.???

???His attorney was saying how these disadvantaged children, you can???t trust them ... because they come from low income. I don???t think that has any bearing on anything,??? she said. ???I was warned that is what this basically would be about, because kids in The Second Mile are basically disadvantaged.???

In the first page of their presentment, grand jurors noted that, too. They accused Sandusky of using the charity to find his victims, ???many of whom were vulnerable due to their social situations.???

???Obviously it???s a price that the brave victim pays,??? Gillum said.

More @ Mothers of two of Jerry Sandusky's alleged victims lash out at Penn State officials' handling of scandal | PennLive.com
 
this stuff is all going on very close to my home , and people are literally blown away , its all im hearing about on the news and even anywhere i go people are talking about it , he was a well respected man untill now. but many people were very suprised
 
On a related note to this disturbing story is not only how organizations (which are comprised of people) work, but how big, profitable, and PR-centered College Football programs are.

Part of the reason why I lost interest in the UW Huskies, that I grew up with as a kid. I went to many games. Traveled to a few bowl games.

Eventually the Athletic department got big. The football players live on a completely separate part of the campus. Lots of $$ coming in. The highest paid state employee was the Husky football coach (but donors paid the coach's million dollar per year salary (Neuheisel).

Scandal here and there. The typical, I didn't care.

It just got too big. Most fans don't let that distract or deter them, however.

NCAA programs at the big schools are machines.
 
There should not be a question mark in the thread title. I hated PSU before this, now I think they should all be taken out and shot.:shooter:
 
this stuff is all going on very close to my home , and people are literally blown away , its all im hearing about on the news and even anywhere i go people are talking about it , he was a well respected man untill now. but many people were very suprised
Personality and character are not same thing. People need to be able to tell the differences. Many people fall for sweet talks and fake smiles.
 
This shit is so fucked up. What happens in these peoples minds that causes them to commit such heinous things?
 
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