Conklin bill to reform Penn State University’s Board of Trustees


Removes voting power from school president, governor

 HARRISBURG, July 27 – State Rep. Scott Conklin, D-Centre, today announced plans to introduce legislation which would significantly alter the structure and governance of Penn State University’s Board of Trustees.

Conklin said his legislative reform was prompted by recommendations issued by state Auditor General Jack Wagner in the wake of the child sexual abuse charges brought against former football coach Jerry Sandusky.

“Specifically, Wagner recommended overhauling the manner in which the board of trustees operates to create greater transparency and accountability,” Conklin said. “This is a necessary step to restoring public trust in one of Pennsylvania’s great universities.”

Conklin’s reforms would include, but not be limited to:

·         Amending Penn State’s enabling statute to remove the president of the university as an ex-officio voting member of the board;

·         Prohibiting the president from serving on any standing committee, special committees and subcommittees of the board;

·         Amending Penn State’s enabling statute to make the governor an ex-officio “non-voting” member of the board; and

·         Making the Right-To-Know Law applicable to all four state-related universities.

“It is my belief that the reforms proposed by Auditor General Wagner will be instrumental and effective in eliminating the concentration of power among administrative officials,” Conklin said.  “This will ensure the board of trustees operates in a more cohesive and transparent manner while providing adequate and much-needed oversight.

“The heart-wrenching saga that has unfolded over the Sandusky investigation leaves no doubt in anyone’s mind that the system as presently structured has failed,” Conklin said. “It is our obligation to fix it.”

Conklin plans to introduce his legislation when the House returns from summer recess.

 

Two Critical Errors in the Freeh Report


The Patriot News reported at least two instances recorded in the original Freeh report involving former Penn State Athletic Director Tim Curley were corrected.

In the initial report, released July 12, Freeh said Curley met with Jerry Sandusky in 1998 after a police report was filed regarding his inappropriate conduct with a boy in the Lasch Football Building showers. Sandusky, was still employed at the time and that incident was investigated by campus police.

Curley had no interaction with Sandusky after that incident, but did instead in 2001, post-Sandusky retirement and after former wide receivers coach Mike McQueary told his superiors he had witnesses another incident of abuse by Sandusky in the showers.

An email exchange between Curley and university counsel Wendell Courtney also was amended, according to the Patriot News and the Philadelphia Inquirer.

This was the Freeh report’s initial account of the email exchange: “Courtney emails Schultz a newspaper story about the Sandusky charges. Schultz replies: “I was never aware that ‘Penn State police investigated inappropriate touching in a shower’ in 1998.”

The corrected exchange: “Courtney emails Schultz a newspaper story about the Sandusky charges and states: “I was never aware that ‘Penn State police investigated inappropriate touching in a shower’ in 1998.”

Courtney said those words, not Schultz, as Freeh initially alleged.

The case against Joe Paterno: Weak to non-existent on the current record


Posted on July 26, 2012 by Paul Mirengoff in Sports

After more than 430 interviews and a review of more than 3.5 million documents and other information, the Freeh Report concludes that three emails from other people – former Penn State President Graham Spanier, Athletic Director Timothy Curley, and Senior Vice President Gary Schultz – prove that Mr. Paterno was a co-conspirator in a cover-up. I do not read the evidence in the Freeh Report that way, and I do not believe the conclusions about Mr. Paterno are either warranted or fair.

The claim seems to be that Mr. Paterno knew about a 1998 allegation and did nothing, and that in 2001, when he learned about Mike McQueary’s information, he waited a day before he reported the information to the athletic director (Curley) and the vice president in charge of the University Police (Schultz) and then did nothing else.

First, with respect to the 1998 incident, the Freeh Report says that several authorities promptly investigated and reviewed the matter, including the Department of Public Welfare, the University Police Department, the State College police, and the local district attorney’s office. Freeh Report at 42-47. A “counselor” named John Seasock issued a report that found “no indication of child abuse.” Freeh Report at 42-46. Mr. Seasock interviewed the alleged victim and determined that “there seems to be no incident which could be termed as sexual abuse, nor did there appear to be any sequential pattern of logic and behavior which is usually consistent with adults who have difficulty with sexual abuse of children.” Freeh Report at 44 (quoting Mr. Seasock’s 1998 evaluation of the alleged victim). The Freeh Report adds that Mr. Seasock “couldn’t find any indication of child abuse.” Freeh Report at 45.

The police investigated and “did not question Sandusky at this time,” and the Freeh Report says that “the local District Attorney declined to prosecute Sandusky for his actions.” Freeh Report at 45-46. A “senior administrator” explained that “the case against Sandusky was ‘severely hampered’ by Seasock’s report.” Freeh Report at 46. The University Police also investigatedthe matter and unlike the local police, they interviewed Sandusky. Sandusky claimed “nothing happened” (Freeh Report at 46) and the University Police concluded that “no sexual assault occurred.” Freeh Report at 47.

The only evidence of Mr. Paterno’s involvement is a passing reference in an email from Curley to Spanier and Schultz that says that Curley “touched base with the coach. Keep us posted.” Freeh Report at 20, 48. A second email from Curley to Schultz that says “Coach is anxious to know where it stands.” Freeh Report at 20, 48. There is no other information about Mr. Paterno’s involvement in the incident. In fact, the Freeh Report does not even establish that the references to “Coach” refer to Joe Paterno. The most it can and does say is that “[t]he reference to Coach is believed to be Paterno.” Freeh Report at 49. The Freeh Report cites no evidence to support this assertion, but even if “Coach” refers to Coach Paterno, what do these emails prove? The answer is: nothing. At most, these emails suggest that Mr. Paterno was concerned and wanted to know whether Sandusky was guilty of any wrongdoing.

The Freeh Report concludes that the “record” is “not clear as to how the conclusion of the Sandusky investigation was conveyed to Paterno.” Freeh Report at 51. The Report includes many statements that assert things like “nothing in
the record indicates that Joe Paterno spoke with Sandusky.” See, e.g., Freeh Report at 51. The absence of evidence or information proves only that Mr. Freeh did not find evidence. It does not affirmatively prove anything about Mr. Paterno.

Mr. Paterno explained his actions before he died by saying that “I was afraid to do something that might jeopardize what the University procedure was. So I backed away and turned it over to some other people, people I thought would have
a little more expertise than I did.” Freeh Report at 77-78. This statement makes perfect sense, and the notion of a football coach supervising a criminal investigation is ridiculous. It is very possible that Curley or Schultz or both
told Mr. Paterno to stay out of the matter; in fact, Schultz should have told him as much. But we don’t know because Schultz and Curley are under indictment and not talking, Paterno is dead, and the Freeh Report did not find any information about this issue.

Much of the case against Mr. Paterno seems to rely on (1) the theory that the Athletic Director, Curley, was JoePa’s “errand boy”; and (2) an email dated February 27, 2001 from Curley to Schultz and Spanier which says that Curley gave the matter “more thought” after “talking it over with Joe” and was “uncomfortable with what we agreed were the next steps.” Freeh Report at 74-75. But the “errand boy” evidence amounts to a reference by an unidentified “senior Penn State official” (page 75), and what does it prove anyway? That one person viewed Curley as Paterno’s “errand boy”?

There is no evidence that Curley-as-errand-boy covered up because Joe Paterno told him to do so. And the February 27 email at most suggests that Mr. Paterno spoke with Curley. It does not say what Curley and Paterno discussed, and without any explanation from either Curley or Paterno, it is absurd to read into this that Mr. Paterno was the puppet master behind a coverup orchestrated by Curley, Spanier, and Schultz.

Mr. Paterno was a football coach, not an expert in criminal law or investigations, and this notion of him as some kind of omnipotent and omniscient God who callously turned his back on a serial child molester is unsupported by any evidence.

Eliminate Some Memberships on Penn State Board


Pennsylvania’s governor and Penn State’s president should not serve as voting members of the university’s board of trustees, the state’s elected governmental watchdog said Thursday.

Auditor General Jack Wagner said the Legislature needs to act on his proposal because it is not possible for the university trustees to be objective in restructuring the organization.

Gov. Tom Corbett shouldn’t be a voting member of the Penn State board of trustees, the state auditor general (and former gubernatorial candidate) Jack Wagner says.

His suggestions were issued ahead of a news conference to discuss them, and Wagner promised a fuller report in about two months that will elaborate on how the board can be changed to make its decisions more transparent to the public.

Wagner said the university president, currently Rodney Erickson, should not be a member of the board at all, and that the governor, who is now Tom Corbett, should only serve as a non-voting member to address concerns about a potential conflict of interest.

Corbett is a Republican, while Wagner is among the state’s highest-ranking elected Democrats.

Corbett spokesman Kevin Harley was dismissive of the idea. “That sounds like a recommendation from someone who lost a race for governor,” Harley said.

A spokesman for Erickson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Wagner also said the state’s open records law should be amended so that it more fully covers Penn State and three other so-called state-related universities: Temple, Lincoln and Pitt. And he said the Penn State board should not be able to meet without the participation of at least half of it 32 trustees — the current minimum is 13.

Penn State has received hundreds of millions of dollars in state support in recent years, and Wagner said the total is more than $10 billion since the university was founded in the 19th century.

 

Thank you, Ohio State Alumnus–A Level Head At Last!


“As a graduate of The Ohio State University, I never thought that I would be writing about anything that related to Penn State. But, I can no longer take the ignorance and lynch mob mentality of many of the media outlets, as well as the general populace. It has always amazed me that we (readers and listeners of mass media) have become so lazy that we swallow every morsel of so called news as gospel. Lest we forget that the media must sell their wares in order to remain in business. With the advent of ever evolving technology that task has become increasing more difficult. As a result, the media too have evolved. What used to be a respected profession, where journalistic integrity and the reporting of the facts were not only the norm, but were sacred and guarded, has now become a mission to remain relevant and profitable. Their integrity and reporting of the facts have often taken a back seat to the sensationalizing of some facet of the news. It’s no longer good enough to simply report the facts and allow the readers or listeners to form their own judgment or opinion. Many articles today are merely watered down editorials with morsels of the truth thrown in so one could call it a news article. I believe that the media are the most powerful people in the world. We have been led to believe, in fact brain washed in a sense, to accept the words of the media as an unbiased and fair representation of the facts. The Sandusky Sex Scandal, or as it’s better know the Penn State Sex Scandal… because the word “Sandusky” won’t sell as many papers or TV ads as “Penn State”, is a prime example of the media gone wrong. I continue to be amazed by the irrational comments from generally intelligent people. Their naive acceptance of the media’s portrayal of the students/athletes, as well as Joe Paterno and other officials at Penn State is very bothersome to me and it should be to you. For those of us who have actually read Louis Freeh’s report (which is the most comprehensive study about the Sandusky Sex Scandal) with an open mind, it must make you wonder about a number of things. One of the most basic tenets of the entire document has been largely ignored by media. The report clearly states that in 1998 an investigation took place regarding Sandusky and alleged misconduct with young boys. The District Attorney along with the police department and several state organizations conducted numerous interviews. School officials, parents and alleged victims were all questioned. The investigation was closed and no charges were filed. Sandusky should have been stopped in 1998. He wasn’t. The report went on to say that law enforcement and child welfare officials were ill equipped and not sufficiently trained to adequately recognize and handle adolescent sexual abuse. What? Why isn’t that the headline? Apparently, that won’t sell as many ads or newspapers. That one sentence shines a whole new light on this entire tragedy. If the professionals who are hired to serve and protect didn’t have the proper knowledge, training and education as it pertained to adolescent abuse, what makes everyone think that a football coach or academic officials should? However, not one media outlet picked up on that and reported the finding. Apparently, it wasn’t sensational enough. In 2001, having been through a Sandusky investigation just three years prior, Joe Paterno reported yet another incident to school officials. Knowing the result of the 1998 investigation, one might understand (not condone, but understand) why, after the initial report was filed, there was limited follow up on the part of Joe Paterno. There’s no doubt that Paterno and school officials made some horrendous decisions. But, so did the law enforcement personnel and state agencies who were supposed to be knowledgeable about pedophiles and their characteristics. I question why the media and many of you are holding a football coach and an administration to a higher standard than law enforcement and agencies whose job it is to protect all of us? Would you hold Child Protective Services, State Police or the District Attorney responsible if the Nittany Lions lost a football game? Of course not. It’s irrational and idiotic. I’m not downplaying the acts of Sandusky. They were horrific! Further, I’m not defending anyone, but simply pointing out the fact that the mob is trying to condemn Penn State’s current students, athletes and officials for grievous acts committed 12 or 14 years ago. For the most part, today’s student body at Penn State were just getting out of diapers when these acts occurred. How is it rational or just for them to be punished? One final thought. During the same time frame of 12 to 14 years, the students at Penn State have raised and donated nearly $100 million dollars for research and a cure for pediatric cancer. Thousands of young lives have been saved or made better because of the students at Penn State. Let’s stop casting aspersions and not forget all of the good they have done. So, before you jump on the band wagon, perhaps you should know the facts and not just what the media want you to believe. I’m proud to be a Buckeye, but feel very sad for the victims, students and everyone who calls Happy Valley home.”

A Scenario Where Joe Paterno is Still Joe Paterno


Editorial by John Ziegler

As far as we know the evidence indicates that the first time Paterno could have possibly known anything about allegations of sexual misconduct against Jerry Sandusky was in mid 1998. One of the most important “red herrings” of this case (and one of several coincidences which have made defending Paterno more difficult than it should have been) is that earlier that year Paterno had told Sandusky that he would never be the head coach at Penn State.

This was not only incredibly ironic (since Paterno cited Sandusky’s devotion to the Second Mile charity as the prime reason), but because it directly led to Sandusky’s retirement, it is still being incorrectly being cited as evidence that Paterno knew he was dealing with a pedophile early on and forced him out of the program. The reality is that the Freeh Report itself makes it clear that this process began before the initial criminal investigation of Sandusky.

Soon after the wheels for Sandusky’s retirement were first put in motion, when the actual investigation did begin, it appears that Paterno was indeed informed at some level. We know this because Athletic Director Tim Curley, in an email titled “Paterno” which appears to deal with the investigation of Sandusky, says he has “touched base with the coach.”

Paterno’s detractors have leaped to the assumption that this reference proves that the coach knew about the 1998 investigation and therefore lied in his grand jury testimony. However, this is not necessarily true.

First of all, “touching base” can obviously mean literally as little as, “hey Joe, we may have an issue with Jerry, I’ll let you know if there is anything else important to report.” If this was extent of the conversation, then there is absolutely nothing inconsistent with Paterno’s testimony.

Paterno testified when asked about 1998 that he vaguely remembered hearing a “rumor” about Sandusky. If Curley really only “touched base with the coach” then, for that to turn into a “rumor” 13 years later in the mind of a man now in his 80s makes perfect sense.

The entire key to Freeh’s case against Paterno is that there is a second email from 1998 which Freeh says “is believed” to reference a conversation with Paterno. That email is titled ”Jerry” and in it Curley writes that “coach is anxious” for an update on the investigation. If “coach” does indeed refer to Paterno then it appears to be devastating to any strong defense of him, largely because of the word “anxious.” While it certainly could be Paterno, Freeh’s presumption here is not without significant problems.

First, the subject is “Jerry” and the first reference to anyone is “coach” (not “the coach” as in the previous email in question refers to Paterno). At the time, Sandusky was certainly still a coach in good standing and he knew already that he was being investigated. Had he asked Curley (whom he had known for quite a long time) for an update, he certainly would have been far more likely to be ”anxious” about it than Paterno would have been. Why can’t “coach” here mean Sandusky and not Paterno?
Schultz was providing an update ON Sandusky not TO Sandusky.  He was writing to Curley who would presumably tell Sandusky what he found out. Regardless, this seems to be an incredibly weak argument for such a remarkably significant point. For if “coach” here means Sandusky and not Paterno, Freeh’s case against “the coach” is suddenly hanging by a thread.

Part of why my theory here is preposterous to people like reporters is that they are working under the presumption that Paterno, being the God that he was, just had to know/rule all. In their minds, Curley (who was very close to Paterno) knowing something is the same as Paterno knowing it. However, there are once again problems with this popular presumption.

What if Curley was not allowed to tell Paterno the details of a criminal investigation of someone reporting directly to him? While I have not been able to yet find the appropriate section in the Penn State policy handbook (it is rather difficult to navigate), it does make clear that the “privacy of the accused” will be “protected,” and I have spoken to several people at state run schools who say such a restriction would be standard operating procedure.

Regardless of that (which at this point I concede is mostly speculation), the issue of Paterno’s power has been greatly misused by his critics.

Whenever it suits their purposes and fits into their contrived narrative, Paterno is a God who runs everything at Penn State (yet somehow he wasn’t able to get his QB coach Mike McQueary to temper his testimony even a little bit at the most critical point in the “cover up”). Not only is this a simplistic view with ethic overtones (it seems clear that Italian mafia stereotypes are in play here), but it also overlooks an important element of real power.

Sometimes having power means NOT having to handle messes that you don’t want to deal with because you have other people who can do it for you (especially when you have already been coaching for five decades). People forget that, at this point, the Sandusky situation was not yet a big deal and in Paterno’s mind he was soon going to be retiring anyway. Letting Curley handle the dirty work made total sense.

This leads me to another plausible explanation for the 2nd, critical, 1998 email.
Perhaps Curley is indeed referring to Paterno when he says “coach” but he is fibbing or name dropping. In other words, he wants to get an answer (to a question to which he may not really have been entitled to one) so he is strongly implying he is asking on behalf of Paterno. Since he and Paterno were known to be tight, no one would have even questioned it. Living in Los Angeles, I can tell you people do this kind of thing with celebrities all the time.

Considering the incredible importance of that email (the entire case against Paterno changes radically without it), it seems utterly absurd to discount all of these benign explanations, especially before Curley has even ever been asked about them.

This is without question the most stunningly outrageous element of both the removal of Paterno’s statue and the nonsensical NCAA sanctions. The notion that both were done before Curley spoke is the most glaring violation of basic due process in my memory. Most amazingly, thanks to the horrendous media coverage, no one even seems to realize that Curley (whom it must be noted publicly praised Paterno’s ”honor and integrity” after he himself had already been charged in this situation) could still blow apart the entire case against Paterno in literally five minutes.

It is very consistent with the current evidence that Paterno was barely told about the 98 investigation. In fact, Freeh admits in his report that he could find no sign that Paterno was ever even informed of its conclusions, which seems like pretty powerful evidence that he wasn’t deeply in the loop.

Mike McQueary came to Paterno with a story in which he apparently saw something “sexual” going on in a Penn State shower between Sandusky and a ten year old boy. Now it must be noted (it never is in the media) that McQueary would later misreport the year and the month in which this took place, told a doctor friend the next day that he saw no sex, and no one has ever come forward claiming to be the victim in that episode. These facts are critically important in understanding an alternative narrative that has never even been considered in the media.

Paterno then calls his superior and apparently arranges for McQueary to meet with Curley and Schultz, who was in charge of the campus police.

Now, it should be pointed out that, had Paterno, the “Mafia Don” wanted to cover this up, there would have been no reason for him not to just say to McQueary, who was desperate for a full time job, “thanks, this stays between us, right?” That would have been the end of it. But instead, Paterno, with no reason to protect an ex coach (and no history of fearing “bad publicity”) whom he never really liked, decides to get at least two members of the administration involved.

Unfortunately, those in charge ultimately made the critical mistake of not reporting Sandusky to outside authorities. But why and how that decision was made is far more ambiguous than the media would have you believe.

In their narrative there was a change in the plan and that this decision to keep the actions against Sandusky’s essentially “in house” came from Paterno. The basis for this assumption is one email, again from Curley, in which he writes “after speaking with Joe, I have decided…” To Freeh/media this means that the “Mafia Don” has spoken and now his evil wishes have to be carried out.

not only does Curley never even imply what the actual nature of his conversation with Paterno was, he also does something rather odd if he is indeed carrying out orders. He begins each of the next four thoughts/sentences with the word “I.” Not “we,” but “I.”

At the very least this opens up all sorts of scenarios where Paterno was not driving a decision which, for the record, he had no business making either legally or, considering his esteemed position in the community, morally (having Paterno be directly responsible for turning in Sandusky would have been extremely prejudicial to any subsequent investigation/trial).

There of course is also the possibility that Curley went “rogue” here and, since he clearly knew about 98, he had an incentive to keep this thing from going public. It is conceivable that he was simply casually, and with plausible deniability (I said it was my decision!) used Paterno’s name to strengthen an argument he had to win. An explanation like this, while not probable, would get Paterno’s defense nearly home free.

But even if Paterno was informed about, or even influenced, the decision not to report Sandusky to outside authorities, there is still a scenario consistent with the known evidence where Paterno is not a pedophile protector.

Consider for a moment the evidence in the McQueary episode. The only witness does nothing to stop what he saw and the boy makes no effort to come to him for help. That witness somehow forgets the month/year in which the event happens. He tells a doctor friend the next day he saw no sex. He participates in at least one Sandusky sponsored event after this incident. And, despite the chance to bring justice against his rapist and make millions of dollars in a civil suit, incredibly, no one has ever come forward to say they were the victim.

I believe that all of this happened because what Mike McQueary really saw wasn’t the rape of a young boy, but rather a “grooming” session gone wrong. Think about it, Sandusky was really good at not getting caught. Why would he risk trying to have sex with a boy in a place where lots of other people had access?

The reason no victim has ever come forward is that there was no rape that day (the media won’t tell you this, but for the record his jury acquitted Sandusky of that charge),

If Paterno was willing to lie about the 98 investigation, why did he tell the truth about 2001 in a way that could easily make him look so bad? Why didn’t he leave it at “horseplay” or even claim he couldn’t remember? (Keep in mind McQueary openly admitted that the story he told Paterno was supposedly greatly sanitized, so the coach had very wide latitude here.)

My answer to these questions provide the most ironic and chilling twist in this entire human drama. I believe that, much like McQueary, Paterno, knowing that there was a grand jury investigation, came to believe that Sandusky was probably a child molester and was frustrated that they could never satisfactorily prove it (and, yes, perhaps even remorseful that they could have done so).

In that context, Paterno didn’t want to lie, but he also didn’t want to do anything which could harm the case against Sandusky. If Joe Paterno, the living legend, diminished what the primary witness in the case, an employee of his, was saying, it could be devastating to the prosecution (for those who will say that Paterno couldn’t have known the exact nature of McQueary’s testimony; he wasn’t stupid.

While there are several other plausible interpretations of the word “sexual” than the one the media prefers, I believe Paterno chose a word that was probably stronger than what McQueary told him, but vague enough to not be a lie. In using the word “sexual” Paterno was essentially taking one for the “team.” I doubt he could have possibly contemplated the catastrophic consequences which would occur to his real team, his school and his legacy when he did so, but the jaw dropping irony of his case may be that Paterno allowed himself, perhaps unwittingly, to be labeled a pedophile protector because he wanted to make sure he wasn’t responsible for Sandusky escaping justice one more time.

In that way, you could actually argue that Joe Paterno’s decision here, the one which literally brought down his life’s work, is the only real act of heroism in this entire mess. For he is the only person I can see who, at any point, put their own self interest behind that of the common good (members of the media please make sure your heads don’t explode after reading that last paragraph).

I have already written extensively about all that happened next and how the media created a false narrative to serve their own purposes. Obviously no one knows exactly what has transpired here and, unless Tim Curley speaks honestly, we never will. My goal here was to create a plausible narrative where the Joe Paterno we thought we knew really was that guy. I believe I have done that in a way which is more realistic than the current conventional wisdom. You can decide for yourself which version makes more sense in the world you live in.

Why the NCAA’s Sanctions on Penn State Are Just Dead Wrong


By Dave Zirin, The Nation

At 9 this morning, a crime took place masquerading as a farce. NCAA President
Mark Emmert, a man who in 2010 called Joe Paterno “the
definitive role model of what it means to be a college coach,
” levied a
series of unprecedented sanctions against the football program Paterno built,
the Penn State Nittany Lions. Emmert determined that the entire program had to
suffer because of the role the late Coach Paterno, along with other leading
school officials, played in covering the tracks of serial pedophile Jerry
Sandusky. That collective suffering will mean a $60 million fine, a four-year
post-season ban and the vacating of all wins from 1998–2011. He said piously,
“Programs and individuals must not overwhelm the values of higher education.”
It’s not “the death penalty,” also known as the end of the football program, but
it’s life without the possibility of parole.

The discussion we should be having is how to organize the outrage of the Penn
State campus and the people of Pennsylvania to expel the entire Board of
Trustees. Just as the statue of Coach Paterno came tumbling down in the name of
turning the page at Penn State, the board should follow. We should be talking
about how to push for a full investigation of Governor Tom Corbett and his own
extra-slow-motion investigation of Sandusky when he was the state’s attorney general. Former
Governor Ed Rendell, as a board trustee during Sandusky’s continued presence on
campus, should be subpoenaed as well. But instead, we get the maiming of Penn
State’s athletic budget for the grand purpose of turning Mark Emmert and the
NCAA into something they have no legal right to be. Private, unaccountable
actors have no business cutting the budgets of a public campus. Today’s move by
Emmert didn’t bring justice to any of Sandusky’s victims. It didn’t help clean
house at Penn State. Instead it was extra-legal, extrajudicial and stinks to
high heaven.

Freind: An open letter to Gov. Corbett on Sandusky affair


there are a number of questions which you have failed to answer concerning your investigation of Jerry Sandusky
1) Based on a decade’s worth of evidence of Sandusky’s predatory activities, why did it take the Attorney General’s Office three years to arrest him? I fully understand that it takes time to conduct an investigation, but as numerous prosecutors have stated, you could have arrested him quickly and continued building the case.
Tragically, it is probable that Sandusky continued to molest victims during your epic investigation, as predators do not stop preying unless forced to do so. Had he been arrested early, (standard procedure in many cases with a lot less evidence), Sandusky would have had to post bail, had restrictions placed upon him, and, most important, been under an ultra-intense media and community spotlight – every minute of every day until his trial.
In short, children would finally have been safe. This would have created a much more favorable environment for additional witnesses to come forward, knowing their bigger-than-life demon could hurt them no more. Arresting Sandusky quickly would have in no way jeopardized the strength of the case.
One of two things seems to be true, as there is no third option. Either A) you were an incompetent attorney general, which virtually no one believes, or B) the investigation was deliberately understaffed and drawn out because you did not wish to be the gubernatorial candidate who took down fabled Penn State – with its massive and intensely loyal alumni network – and the beloved Joe Paterno. Since doing so would have presented difficult campaign challenges, many are asking if politics was placed above children’s safety. Which leads to the next question.
2) Why was the investigation so understaffed? Yes, you just now claimed – after eight months – that media reports are wrong that only one investigator was assigned the case for the first 15 months. The real number, as you now state, was a whopping two. We know you were busy with Bonusgate, but political corruption never threatens anyone’s physical well-being, particularly defenseless children.
And the two investigators assigned were narcotics agents. While Sandusky’s heinous crimes were many, drug offenses were not among them.
Yes, they were former police officers. But wouldn’t the reasonable course have been to assign agents with experience in child molestation cases? Did their inexperience lengthen the investigation more than normal … say, past your election in November 2010?
Additional resources were available. Upon becoming governor, you placed state police on the case. You could have made that same request to Gov. Ed Rendell, and, given the stakes, there is virtually no possibility he would have refused. And since you are a former United States attorney, you undoubtedly realized that federal assistance was also available3) Do you believe ethical and moral lines were crossed when, after investigating Penn State as Attorney General, you then participated as a member of the Board of Trustees upon becoming governor?
In other words, knowing full well that the investigation was still in full swing, conducted by your handpicked attorney general successor, you nonetheless chose to sit on the very board you had been – and still were – investigating!
Did you ever consider recusing yourself from board activities until the investigation was concluded? Since governors rarely attend board meetings, this would have in no way raised suspicions.
4) As governor, why did you personally approve a $3 million taxpayer-funded grant to Sandusky’s Second Mile charity, given your knowledge that Sandusky was under investigation for multiple child rapes?
Your statement that blocking the grant would have tipped people off to the investigation is utterly disingenuous, particularly since the media reported on the investigation in March, and you did not approve the funds until July 2011.
Vetoing the charitable grant would have simply been viewed as another financial cutback in a budget full of slashed programs.
So one has to ask if the $640,000 in campaign donations from board members of the Second Mile, along with their businesses and families, had anything to do with your actions?
If not, fine. But how did such a massively significant point slip your mind – until the media brought it up? And was that question also out of line?

What is Joe Paterno’s Legacy? It is THE PENN STATE WAY!


Excerpted from the SBNation, bscaff

The legacy isn’t the statue in front of Beaver Stadium. The mob can have that. Take it down. Joe never liked it to begin with.

It is not that 23,000-seat Beaver Field begat 107,000-seat Beaver Stadium. It’s not 409 wins, National Championships, undefeated seasons, Academic All-Americans, Peachy Paterno ice cream, black shoes, cuffed pants, or white socks. It’s not the referee doll Grandma Sue hung in effigy on the front porch.

It’s not even the Library, or the College of Liberal Arts, or the Paterno Fellows, or the Religious Center, or the Centre County Special Olympics, or the Greek Scholars.

And it’s not just the football lettermen, so many of whom graduated and enjoy successful, productive lives.

It’s the Penn State Way. It’s an ethos. It’s why Penn Staters are so conflicted and upset.

The Penn State Way commissions a multi-million dollar independent investigation which, in eight months, revealed more than did three years of state criminal investigations. Then, the Penn State Way publishes the painful results for the world to mock, while we admit our mistakes, and resolve to move forward and improve.

Do you know why Penn State alums have been so angry with you, Board of Trustees? It’s because you acted precisely opposite of the Penn State Way, when you fired Joe without facts; then claimed he wasn’t fired; then requested his 1980 PSU rotary telephone using a form letter; and then fired him again in another press release.

But, at least you spent $6.5 million wisely. At least you redeemed yourselves.

That’s right, lazy, angry sportswriting jerks. The reason you can tear down the Paterno temple; the reason you can claim Joe lied is because Penn State investigated itself more critically than the Commonwealth government. Then, it told all to everyone. How does that compare to SMU you nooby stooges?

WE don’t cut corners. WE play all or none. WE do the right thing. WE maintain higher standards. WE give our best effort always. WE help the less fortunate. And, WE stand up, are counted, and WE FIGHT! when WE see a wrong. That’s why…

WE ARE. PENN STATE.

Yes, Joe Paterno failed the Penn State Way in the Sandusky scandal. He wasn’t alone, nor was he the most culpable. But, over the preceeding 60 years, he also taught and lived the Penn State Way. He is, in large part, precisely why Penn Staters feel that there is a “Penn State Way” at all.

That is a great legacy. It’s a far sight better than the sportswriters’ Paterno temple. And no amount of scorn, contempt, or shouting can change it.

Freeh LIES!!


Written By Jeffrey Simons, Aurabass

 

After Curley’s initial updates to Paterno, the available record is not clear as to how the conclusion of the Sandusky investigation was conveyed to Paterno. Witnesses consistently told the Special Investigative Counsel that Palerno was in control of the football facilities and knew “everything that was going on.”  As Head Coach, he had the authority to establish permissible uses of his football facilities. Nothing in the record indicates that Curley or Schultz discussed whether Paterno should restrict or terminate Sandusky’s uses of the facilities or that Paterno conveyed any such expectations to Sandusky. Nothing in the record indicates that Spanier, Schultz, Paterno or Curley spoke directly with Sandusky about the allegation or monitored his activities.

  1. Freeh flat out LIES- there is NO record of any “update” by Curley to Paterno.
  2. Then he uses the prejudicial unfounded theory that Joe knew “everything that was going on”
  3. Then Freeh blames Paterno for doing nothing to restrict Sandusky’s use of facilities over an investigation he was not supposed to know about and did not know about.
  4. And states that the record shows Paterno never spoke to Sandusky about the allegations.
How can anyone take Freeh’s claims about Joe seriously after reading that?
So let’s skip forward to the 2011 Grand Jury Testimony of Joe Paterno and the allegations that he LIED to the Grand Jury.
Paterno also testified in January 2011 before the Grand Jury. Paterno was asked,

“Other than the [2001] incident that Mike McQueary reported to you, do you know in any way, through rumor, direct knowledge or any other fashion, of any other inappropriate sexual conduct by Jerry Sandusky with young boys?” Paterno responded, “I do not know of anything else that Ierry would be involved in of that nature, no. I do not know of it. You did mention — I think you said something about a rumor. It may have been discussed in my presence, something else about somebody. I don’t know. I don’t remember, and I could not honestly say I heard a rumor.” The Special Investigative Counsel requested an interview with Paterno in December 2011. Through his counsel, Paterno expressed interest in participating but died before he could be interviewed. Paterno’s family has publicly denied that Paterno had knowledge of the 1998 incident!”

These are the statements used to say Joe lied about knowing of the 1998 investigation. He is now 85 years of age trying to recall if he knew or heard anything about any other incident. He seems to struggle to recall if he had heard a rumor.
The 1998 investigation was conducted confidentially. It appears that Gary Schultz through Tom Harmon at the PSU police was somewhat aware that an investigation was in progress and Tim Curley was advised by Gary Schultz that a DPW Dept of Public Welfare person Lauro was going to interview the boy and Jerry at some point. This does not mean that Gary or Tim were given more than this access to information about the 1998 investigation. It did not seem that serious to them. To extrapolate that Joe would even be interested seems to be a stretch. Joe had a football program to run and a mother’s complaint about a shower with a coach wasn’t a big issue for this reason expressed quite well by PSU Coach Anderson at the Sandusky trial.

Dick Anderson, a longtime Penn State assistant and Sandusky friend who retired in January, testified that he and other members of the football staff were present when Sandusky brought young boys into the team’s showers. He said he never witnessed anything inappropriate.”If Jerry would bring someone in with The Second Mile, they had been working out, for whatever reason they came in, it was not uncommon … with the other coaches in the shower as well, adults and children often shower together at gyms. He noted, for example, that it’s not unusual for him to be in the showers with boys at the YMCA.

In a section of the Freeh report titled A. Sandusky’ s Criminal Activity 1995-1998on page 40

Before May 1998, several staff members and football coaches regularly observed Sandusky showering with yormg boys in the Lasch Building (now the East Area Locker Building or “Old Lasch”). None of the individuals interviewed by the Special Investigative Cormsel notified their superiors of this behavior. Former Coach Richard Anderson testified at Sanduskys trial in Irme 2012 that he often saw Sandusky in the showers with children in the football facilities but he did not believe the practice to be improper.“

Freeh labels this to be revelations of “Criminal Activity” but that is only in the wake of the 2012 conviction of Sandusky on the grooming charges where the pattern of this grooming establishes them as critical..Rightly or wrongly the coaching staff did not consider these kids using their locker room and showers to be criminal in any way. Since that was the prevailing attitude it’s easy to see why Joe would not consider this investigation of a shower to be of any importance. Joe like these other coaches was of a time when males of varying ages used group showers all the time without it seeming anything but natural.
Freeh seems to base his entire indictment of Joe and Penn State on the premise that they knew or thought Jerry Sandusky was a criminal pedophile because he showered with boys. Freeh assumes this meant they did not care about protecting kids from sex abuse. It seems clear to me they never considered these showers to be sex abuse. As athletes and coaches they had always seen men and boys in showers and thought nothing of it.
Absent any proof of actual sexual activity these Penn State men would never suspect this 30 year coach who lived and worked with them long hours as family to be a pedophile. He was Jerry the Charity Founder, Foster Father and the man honored by George HW Bush and Senator Santorum who wrote books and was the prized Defensive Coordinator at Linebacker U. He loved kids and gave all his spare time to helping them. How could he be some evil predator and bugger of young boys.
So put yourself in Joe’s shoes in 1998 wiping any knowledge of Jerry Sandusky from your mind.
1) These emails do not show that Joe was notified of anything to do with 1998
2) Emails and notes show that Joe was in a dilemma on what to do about Jerry as a coach because
    a) he spent too much time doing admirable charity work and
    b) he was considering retirement and a position as assistant Athletic Director
3) Joe would not be alarmed by any rumor or report about Jerry showering with kids
4) If Joe knew anything why would he lie about an investigation that held NO CRIMINAL behavior?
Joe Paterno was never known to be a LIAR. Louis Freeh? well there are Lies in this report.
I am a Tennessee Grad living in Knoxville with no ties to Penn State and no particular love for Joe P.