Ex-Penn St. Coach Sandusky Charged With Homo Sex Abuse of Young Boys

http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...tleblower-Gets-Legal-Fees-Paid-417808813.html

Penn State Whistleblower Gets $1.7 Million in Legal Fees Paid
Mike McQueary was a key witness in the sexual abuse scandal.
Published at 7:17 PM EDT on Mar 31, 2017

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A former Penn State assistant coach is getting his legal fees paid after winning a whistleblower claim over his treatment by the university after Jerry Sandusky's child molestation arrest.

Judge Thomas Gavin on Thursday granted Mike McQueary's lawyers $1.7 million for their work on the case.

That's on top of the nearly $5 million Gavin awarded to McQueary in November.

The judge's new order is also giving McQueary $15,000 for a bowl bonus he would have earned if the school hadn't suspended him from coaching after Sandusky's arrest in November 2011. Penn State is also being ordered to pay about $34,000 in other legal costs.

A jury previously granted McQueary $7.3 million for defamation and misrepresentation.

Penn State says its lawyers haven't analyzed the judge's decision on legal fees.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Penn-State-Trustee-Quits-Race-418442733.html

Penn State Trustee Quits Race Week After Sandusky Comments
Published 2 hours ago

A Penn State University trustee who told a publication he was "running out of sympathy'' for people he described as "so-called victims'' of Jerry Sandusky said Wednesday he is no longer seeking a second term on the board.

Alumni-elected trustee Al Lord's announcement during a forum was first reported by Pennlive.com.

The retired bank executive drew criticism for his Sandusky comments to The Chronicle of Higher Education. The comments followed former Penn State president Graham Spanier's misdemeanor child endangerment conviction on March 24 for his handling of a 2001 complaint against Sandusky.

Lord, elected in 2014, has been part of a group of nine alumni-elected trustees who have clashed with other board members about how the university has responded to the scandal involving Sandusky, the school's retired defensive football coach now in prison on a child molestation conviction.

"I'll continue to work with you guys,'' Lord told other alumni candidates. "I'm just not sitting through any more of those meetings.''

Lord sent an email to the Chronicle after Spanier's conviction that said he was "running out of sympathy for 35 yr old, so-called victims with 7 digit net worth.''

He released a statement several days ago to the Daily Collegian, the Penn State student newspaper, apologizing for "any pain the comment may have caused actual victims.''

Anthony Lubrano, a fellow alumni-elected trustee and Lord ally, said Lord told him the decision not to seek another term was not related to his comments to the Chronicle. :rolleyes:

"Of course I'm disappointed,'' said Lubrano, who deferred comment on Lord's comments regarding Sandusky victims. "Al was the most cerebral member of the board. He'll be missed.''

It's unclear whether Lord's name will appear on board election ballots that will start going out Monday. A university spokeswoman said Wednesday that vendors will have to be alerted soon to change the ballots. The election runs through May 4.

Eight men testified at Sandusky's trial they had been sexually abused by the former coach when they were children. Sandusky was convicted of abusing all of them along with two others.

The school has said it has settled civil claims of abuse at Sandusky's hands with at least 33 men, paying out more than $90 million. The Sandusky scandal has cost the school much more than that, including NCAA and federal sanctions and fines, as well as legal fees, public relations costs and the expense of making significant structural and procedural changes.

Lord was a strong supporter of Spanier and attended his trial. He told the Chronicle he wondered why Sandusky victims "were so prominent in trial.''

Only one Sandusky victim testified at Spanier's trial, a young man who said he had been abused in a team shower by Sandusky after the 2001 shower incident that Spanier and other top administrators handled.

Two of Spanier's former lieutenants, former university vice president Gary Schultz and former athletic director Tim Curley, struck plea deals on the eve of their trials to misdemeanor child endangerment and testified for the prosecution.

Spanier, Curley and Schultz all await sentencing, which has not been scheduled.

Sandusky is serving a 30- to 60-year prison term but maintains he is innocent and is pursuing appeals. Spanier's lawyers have said he also plans to appeal.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...to-Quit-After-Sandusky-Remarks-418578293.html

Leaders Urge Penn St. Trustee to Quit After Sandusky Remarks
By Mark Scolforo
Published at 8:26 PM EDT on Apr 6, 2017 | Updated at 8:29 PM EDT on Apr 6, 2017

The two highest-ranking leaders on Penn State University's board said Thursday a fellow trustee should immediately step down over comments aimed at people he described as "so-called victims" of Jerry Sandusky.

Chairman Ira Lubert and Vice Chairman Mark Dambly called trustee Al Lord's comments offensive and embarrassing to the board majority, the university community and sexual assault victims.

"We strongly condemn them," Lubert and Dambly said in a statement sent to reporters by the university's office of strategic communications. "Members of this board must hold themselves to a higher standard and represent our university with respect for all."

Lord did not return a phone message seeking comment.

His remarks were sent to a reporter for The Chronicle of Higher Education shortly after former university president Graham Spanier's trial ended with a misdemeanor conviction last month. Lord has been a supporter of Spanier's and attended the trial.

Lord is part of a block of nine alumni-elected trustees who have repeatedly clashed with the board majority over the university's response to the Sandusky scandal. Sandusky's arrest and 2012 conviction for 45 counts of child sexual abuse has sharply divided the university community.

"Once again, we have a group of trustees stomping on our freedom of speech rights," said alumni-elected trustee Anthony Lubrano, a Lord ally. "Al Lord made a comment that was very personal, well within his right. And I think Al should stay on the board until the conclusion of his term."

Lord, a retired bank executive, announced during a Wednesday candidates' forum that he was no longer seeking a second term on the Penn State board. Ballots go out next week in an election that runs through May 4. Lord's term expires June 30. Among those running is Jay Paterno, the son of former head coach Joe Paterno, who was Sandusky's boss for decades.

Lord told the Chronicle after Spanier's conviction that he was "running out of sympathy for 35 yr old, so-called victims with 7 digit net worth." He followed that with a statement earlier this week to the Penn State student newspaper that apologized for "any pain the comment may have caused actual victims."

The university has paid out more than $90 million to settle with at least 33 people who had claims of abuse at Sandusky's hands, one of the issues that has divided the university board.

A jury on March 24 convicted Spanier of misdemeanor child endangerment over his handling of a 2001 complaint about Sandusky showering with a boy.

Two of Spanier's former top lieutenants who also were involved in dealing with the 2001 complaint, former vice president Gary Schultz and former athletic director Tim Curley, struck plea deals to misdemeanor child endangerment charges and testified for the prosecution. All three await sentencing.

Paterno died of lung cancer in January 2012 and was not accused of any crime. Sandusky is appealing his conviction
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...cted-Penn-State-Board-Trustees-421497433.html

Joe Paterno's Son Elected to Penn State's Board of Trustees
Published 7 minutes ago | Updated 6 minutes ago

A son of former Penn State football coach Joe Paterno has been elected to the university's board of trustees. :confused:

Jay Paterno received the most votes in the alumni elections for trustee. There are 38 trustees and alumni vote for nine seats; three are on the ballot each year.

Paterno is a former quarterbacks coach at the school. He'll start his new role in July.

He says in a statement Friday that he sees the post as a "call to service.''

Joe Paterno was one of the winningest coaches in college football history. He was fired in 2011, just months after the arrest of Jerry Sandusky. Paterno died of lung cancer the next year.

Sandusky is the imprisoned ex-assistant football coach convicted of abusing 10 boys. He maintains his innocence.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...-Child-Sexual-Abuse-Court-Case-422041224.html

Sandusky Appealing 2012 Child Sexual Abuse Court Case
Published 16 minutes ago | Updated 11 minutes ago

Jerry Sandusky is arguing his former defense lawyers didn't properly represent him and wants a do-over of the 2012 trial that produced a 45-count conviction for child sexual abuse.

A judge in central Pennsylvania on Thursday heard more testimony in the former Penn State assistant football coach's multi-hearing appeal.

The latest witnesses include one of the victims who testified against Sandusky. He says his memories of the abuse changed in part because of therapy and counseling.

A witness for Sandusky was a psychology professor who specializes in human memory.

A lawyer who represented Sandusky in earlier appeals also took the stand.

The 73-year-old Sandusky is appealing while he serves 30 to 60 years in prison.

The judge says he hopes to rule by summer's end.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...r-Penn-State-President-Spanier-425734783.html

Prosecutors Seek Jail Time for Former Penn State President
Published at 1:13 PM EDT on Jun 1, 2017

Prosecutors want a judge to jail former Penn State President Graham Spanier for his conviction in hushing up suspected child sex abuse in 2001 by Jerry Sandusky, saying he could have prevented other boys from being victimized by the former assistant football coach.

In a court filing unsealed Thursday, the Pennsylvania attorney general's office also assailed two one-time Penn State administrators for their testimony in Spanier's March trial after they pleaded guilty in the case.

Sentencing for all three men is Friday in Dauphin County court.

Prosecutors said state sentencing guidelines indicate that Spanier should get up to a year in jail for his child endangerment conviction.

"The child who was assaulted in the February 2001 shower incident and all of Sandusky's victims that followed were particularly harmed as timely, appropriate action against Sandusky could have prevented their victimization," prosecutors wrote in the 14-page sentencing memorandum. "Their lives have been turned upside down."

They also say that, to this day, the identity of the boy seen in the shower with Sandusky "is still in question" in part because Spanier and the other two men ex-athletic director Tim Curley and ex-vice president Gary Schultz did not alert authorities.

Curley and Schultz each pleaded guilty to child endangerment.

Spanier's four-day trial revolved around a complaint by a graduate coaching assistant, Mike McQueary, who has testified that he told Penn State officials including the late football coach Joe Paterno about seeing Sandusky sexually molesting a boy in a team shower in 2001.

Sandusky was not arrested until 2011, after an anonymous tip led prosecutors to investigate. Sandusky was convicted the next year of sexually abusing 10 boys and is serving 30 to 60 years in prison. At least four victims at Sandusky's trial said they were molested after 2001.

Curley, Schultz and Spanier denied they were told the encounter in the shower was sexual in nature. :rolleyes:

It wasn't the first time the men had heard a complaint about Sandusky. Prosecutors cited a 1998 complaint against Sandusky over his showering with a boy on campus that led to a campus police investigation, but no charges. Sandusky admitted hugging the youngster in the shower, and promised never to shower with a boy again.

In a separate filing, Spanier's lawyer said the 68-year-old is suffering from prostate cancer and heart problems, and asked for probation and community service.

"Graham Spanier has already suffered severely through public shaming, loss of employment, and significant reputational harm," Spanier's lawyers wrote. "He is almost seventy years old and in worsening health."

Prosecutors said they had agreed not to recommend sentences for Curley and Schultz. But, in the filing, they wrote that Curley's forgetfulness during his testimony in Spanier's trial wasn't credible, and that his memory was "markedly more clear" in his private statement to investigators a week before he testified.

"The commonwealth's position is that Curley's testimony in the Spanier trial was designed to protect those who deserved to share blame with Curley for the decisions that led to the colossal failure to protect children from Sandusky, "prosecutors wrote. "His 'forgetfulness' also allowed him to save face in a room full of supporters who publicly called this trial a 'witch hunt' and fraudulent prosecution."

Prosecutors also attacked Schultz, saying it defied common sense that he seemed unwilling to acknowledge the sexual nature of what McQueary reported, given what Schultz knew about the 1998 incident.

Paterno was never charged with a crime. He was dismissed as coach days after Sandusky was charged and died of cancer in 2012 at age 85.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2017/06/02/penn-state-administrators-sentenced/

Former Penn State President, 2 Other Former Administrators Get Jail Time For Roles In Sandusky Scandal
June 2, 2017 1:33 PM

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — A former president of Penn State and two other former university administrators were each sentenced Friday to at least two months in jail for failing to alert authorities to a 2001 allegation against ex-assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky, a decision that enabled the now-convicted serial predator to continue molesting boys.

“Why Mr. Sandusky was allowed to continue to the Penn State facilities is beyond me,” Judge John Boccabella said.

“All three ignored the opportunity to put an end to (Sandusky’s) crimes when they had a chance to do so,” the judge said.

Former Penn State President Found Guilty Of Child Endangerment In Sandusky Case

Ex-president Graham Spanier, 68, got a sentence of 4 to 12 months, with the first two to be spent in jail and the rest under house arrest.

Former university athletic director Tim Curley, 63, received a sentence of 7 to 23 months, with three in jail. Former vice president Gary Schultz, 67, was sentenced to 6 to 23 months, with two months behind bars.

The judge also criticized the actions of the late head football coach, Joe Paterno, who like the other administrators failed to alert child-welfare authorities or police to the 2001 complaint, but was never charged with a crime.

Paterno “could have made that phone call without so much as getting his hands dirty. Why he didn’t is beyond me,” Boccabella said.

The three former Penn State officials all apologized for their actions and to Sandusky’s victims before the sentences were handed down.

“I deeply regret that I did not intervene more forcefully,” Spanier said

Curley and Schultz also told the court they were sorry they didn’t do more.

“I am very remorseful I did not comprehend the severity of the situation. I sincerely apologize to the victims and to all who were impacted because of my mistake,” Curley said.

Said Schultz: “It really sickens me to think I might have played a part in children being hurt. I’m sorry that I didn’t do more, and I apologize to the victims.”

Prosecutors slammed all three men, saying they cared more about themselves than about protecting children.

They reserved their harshest words for Spanier.

“He was a complete and utter failure as a leader when it mattered most,” said Laura Ditka, a state prosecutor.

She said he kept Penn State trustees in the dark about the Sandusky complaint and “he allowed children to be harmed.”

The three men were accused of hushing up a 2001 allegation about Sandusky sexually abusing a boy in a football team shower to protect the university’s reputation.

As a result, prosecutors said, the retired coach went on to victimize four more boys.

All three men have denied they were told the encounter in the shower was sexual in nature.

Prosecutors dropped more serious charges against Curley and Schultz as a result of their pleas, and agreed they would not recommend a sentence for them. But in documents filed on the eve of the sentencing, they assailed the two men over their testimony at Spanier’s trial.

They suggested that Curley was purposely forgetful, and that it defied common sense that Schultz seemed unwilling to acknowledge the sexual nature of the allegation about Sandusky.

Spanier’s trial revolved around testimony by an ex-graduate coaching assistant, Mike McQueary, who said he reported seeing Sandusky molesting a boy in 2001.

Sandusky was not arrested until 2011, after an anonymous email to a county prosecutor led investigators to approach McQueary. Sandusky was found guilty the next year of sexually abusing 10 boys and is serving a prison sentence of 30 to 60 years while he appeals his conviction. At least four victims at Sandusky’s trial said they were molested after 2001.

The scandal led to the firing of beloved football coach Joe Paterno shortly after Sandusky’s arrest, and he died of cancer two months later at the age of 85.

The Hall of Fame coach was never charged with a crime, but a report commissioned by the university concluded he was part of an effort to keep a lid on the allegations against Sandusky for fear of bad publicity.

Penn State’s football program suffered heavy sanctions from the NCAA, and the university has paid out nearly a quarter-billion dollars in fines, court verdicts, settlements and other costs.

McQueary testified about how he went to Paterno a day after the shower encounter to discuss what he had seen. Paterno notified Curley and Schultz, and McQueary met with both of them about a week later. In his 2011 grand jury testimony, Paterno said he was told by McQueary the encounter involved “fondling” and was of “a sexual nature,” but wasn’t sure what the act was.

The prosecution’s key evidence included notes and email exchanges in which Curley, Schultz and Spanier debated what to do after McQueary’s report.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2017/06/30/paterno-family-drops-lawsuit/#comment-357226

Paterno Family Drops Lawsuit Against NCAA Over Freeh Report
June 30, 2017 9:29 PM

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Late Penn State football coach Joe Paterno’s family dropped a lawsuit Friday against the NCAA over its use of a report in the Jerry Sandusky child molestation scandal to punish Paterno and the university.

Paterno’s estate, his son Jay and former assistant William Kenney discontinued their case. The NCAA called it a voluntary decision and said there was no payment involved.

NCAA chief legal officer Donald Remy claimed a total victory for his organization, which he said acted reasonably in adopting conclusions from a university-commissioned report authored by a team led by former FBI director Louis Freeh.

“The Paterno family characterized this case as a ‘search for the truth,'” Remy said. “Its decision today, after years of investigation and discovery, to abandon its lawsuit rather than subject those facts to courtroom examination is telling.”

He said the Paterno family wasted time, effort and money in the case.

In response to a text message from AP, Jay Paterno referred to a one-page statement released by his mother and Joe’s widow, Sue Paterno. In it, she said the family had accomplished its goals and continuing litigation would not yield anything new.

“In the fallout from the Sandusky tragedy and the subsequent mishandling of the investigation by the board and Louis Freeh, I was determined to do everything in my power to defend the honor of Penn State and set the record straight on Joe,” Sue Paterno said. “Although the fight has been long and difficult, enormous progress has been made. The unprecedented sanctions imposed on the University were reversed. The wins, which were unjustly stripped from the players, were reinstated. And even Mr. Freeh has stated under oath that his many alleged ‘findings’ were, in fact, merely his opinions.”

The lawsuit had claimed that college sports’ governing body damaged the Paterno estate’s commercial interests through its use of the Freeh report. Kenney and Jay Paterno alleged the Freeh report rendered them unable to find comparable coaching work.

The Freeh report concluded Joe Paterno and other administrators hushed up a 2001 complaint against Sandusky showering with a boy, for fear of bad publicity.

Paterno, who died in early 2012, was never charged criminally, but three others who were at high-ranking jobs when he was coach are expected to soon report to jail to serve criminal sentences for their response to the 2001 complaint.

Former Penn State president Graham Spanier was convicted in March of misdemeanor child endangerment for his failure to report the complaint about Sandusky apparently sexually abusing a boy on campus. Former athletic director Tim Curley and former vice president Gary Schultz had earlier pleaded guilty to the same charge.

The judge who sentenced Curley, Schultz and Spanier did not spare Paterno, saying he could have called police “without so much as getting his hands dirty. Why he didn’t is beyond me.”

The three are expected to report to county prison July 15 to serve two or three months.

The Paterno family and his legion of supporters have long objected bitterly to the Freeh report’s depiction of the hall of fame coach as having failed to do the right thing in 2001. Sandusky had been one of Joe Paterno’s top assistants for decades before his 1999 retirement.

Paterno told a grand jury in 2011 he did not know of child molestation allegations against Sandusky before 2001. But an insurer has alleged, a judge noted in a court document last year, that a child told Paterno in 1976 that Sandusky had molested him, a claim Paterno’s family has strongly denied.

Jay Paterno, a Nittany Lions assistant coach for 17 years, was elected by alumni in May to a seat on the Penn State board. He starts as a trustee next month.

The university removed a statue of Joe Paterno from outside the football stadium in the wake of the Sandusky scandal, and it has not been replaced.
The NCAA also took away 111 of Paterno’s wins, but they have since been restored :mad:, and with it his status as major college football’s winningest coach with 409 victories.

Sandusky was convicted in 2012 of 45 counts of sexual abuse of 10 boys. He maintains his innocence while serving a 30- to 60-year sentence, and is appealing.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...in-Jail-Terms-in-Sandusky-Case-434685893.html

2 Penn State Ex-Officials Begin Jail Terms in Sandusky Case
Curley, 63, must serve three months in jail, while Schultz, 67, has two months behind bars.
By Joe Mandak
Published at 2:31 PM EDT on Jul 15, 2017 | Updated at 2:33 PM EDT on Jul 15, 2017

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Timothy Curley, left, and Gary Schultz.


Two former high-ranking Penn State administrators surrendered Saturday morning to serve jail sentences for how they responded to a 2001 complaint about Jerry Sandusky showering with a boy.

Former university vice president Gary Schultz and former athletic director Tim Curley turned themselves in, according to Lt. Michael Woods, the shift commander at the Centre County Correctional Facility. Wood confirmed their surrender, but said he was not authorized to release any other details from the jail, which is about 135 miles (217 kilometers) east of Pittsburgh. The lockup is about 7 miles (11 kilometers) northeast of Penn State's main campus.

Schultz and Curley pleaded guilty to misdemeanor child endangerment in March, leading prosecutors to drop three felony charges of child endangerment and conspiracy.

Curley, 63, must serve three months in jail, while Schultz, 67, has two months behind bars. Jail officials said they will be evaluated for participation in work release while incarcerated.

A co-defendant, former Penn State president Graham Spanier, 68, was convicted of the same offense and faces two months in jail. Spanier remains free on bail while he appeals to Superior Court.

Spanier continues to be a tenured faculty member and is on administrative leave. A deal with the university when he was forced out as president after Sandusky's arrest in November 2011 pays him $600,000 a year, ending this fall, after which he will receive a salary.

The three men received a complaint from a graduate assistant football coach in February 2001 who said he was highly disturbed by seeing Sandusky appear to sexually abuse the boy late on a Friday night in a team shower.

They told Sandusky not to bring children onto campus anymore, but prosecutors said the administrators had no plan to enforce that rule.

Police were not notified, and a criminal investigation into Sandusky did not begin until a Pennsylvania school district reported another complaint about him in 2008.

Sandusky was convicted in 2012 of 45 counts of child sexual abuse. He maintains his innocence and is appealing, while serving 30 to 60 years in state prison.

The scandal led the university to fire Hall of Fame football coach Joe Paterno, who was informed of the 2001 incident the next morning by the assistant, Mike McQueary. Paterno notified Curley but did not call police. He died in 2012, a few months after his firing, and was never charged with a crime.

An anonymous email in 2010 led investigators looking into Sandusky to contact McQueary, and he proved to be a critical witness at the criminal trials of both Sandusky and Spanier.

At sentencing for Curley, Schultz and Spanier last month, Judge John Boccabella did not spare Paterno, saying he ``could have made that phone call without so much as getting his hands dirty. Why he didn't is beyond me.''

He also questioned Curley's memory lapses while testifying for the prosecution at Spanier's trial.

`'I find it really hard to believe that he doesn't remember every detail of the most serious mistake he ever made,'' Boccabella said.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...-Coach-Child-Molester-Sandusky-442754133.html

PSU Might Sue Charity Founded by Jerry Sandusky
Penn State files paperwork to sue charity former assistant football coach and convicted child molester Jerry Sandusky founded
Published at 1:58 PM EDT on Sep 5, 2017 | Updated at 3:43 PM EDT on Sep 5, 2017

Penn State University has filed paperwork indicating it intends to sue the charity founded by ex-assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky, whose child molestation scandal rocked the school in 2011.

Sandusky's charity, The Second Mile, has been dissolved and its assets surrendered to the state Attorney General's Office.

The Centre Daily Times reports Penn State filed a writ of summons, which merely states the university's intent to eventually sue the charity. The document filed Friday wasn't unexpected, and doesn't spell out specific allegations.

Sandusky is serving 30 to 60 years in prison for child sexual abuse of young boys he helped through the charity, some of whom were molested on campus.

The scandal has cost Penn State tens of millions of dollars in legal fees, NCAA sanctions and legal settlements, among other payments.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2017/09/15/jeffrey-sandusky-pleads-guilty/

Jeffrey Sandusky, Jerry Sandusky’s Son, Pleads Guilty To Over Dozen Child Sex Abuse Counts
September 15, 2017 5:52 PM

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CENTRE COUNTY, Pa. (CBS/AP) — Jerry Sandusky’s son pleads guilty to over a dozen child sexual abuse counts.

Jeffrey Sandusky, 41, entered a guilty plea on all 14 counts on Friday, one week before a trial was scheduled to begin.

Police say they began an investigation into Jeffrey Sandusky in November 2016 when a child claimed to have received text messages from him asking for naked photos.

Police say Jeffrey Sandusky was dating the child’s mother at the time and was living with them for about five years.

The child’s mother notified police after the explicit messages were shared with her.

According to the criminal complaint, a second child was also abused in 2013.

Jeffrey Sandusky was asked to leave the home over the abuse.

The victims are 15- and 16-year-old girls.

“While we were fully prepared to proceed to trial, today’s guilty plea to all charges ensures a significant prison sentence for defendant’s solicitation of child sex crimes with two minors that once completely trusted him,” said Centre County District Attorney Stacy Parks Miller. “This outcome also ensures the victims need not suffer the trauma and re-victimization of testifying at trial and importantly, the defendant will have to comply with strict sex offender registration requirements for the remainder of his life. We are happy that these girls can move forward and experience a life with adults that deserve their trust.”

The plea deal guarantees Jeffrey Sandusky will spend three to six years in state prison, but the judge will be allowed to impose as much as four to eight years at the time of sentencing.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Penn-State-Tim-Curley-450233393.html

Former Penn State Athletic Director Who Lost Job Amid Jerry Sandusky Scandal Out of Prison
Published 4 hours ago

Former Penn State athletic director Tim Curley has been released from jail and is now serving the house-arrest portion of his sentence in the Jerry Sandusky child-sex scandal.

Pennlive.com reports the 63-year-old defendant was released Oct. 3 from the Centre County jail.

He was sentenced to seven to 23 months in jail after pleading guilty to child endangerment for not properly investigating a complaint by another Penn State assistant coach that Sandusky abused a boy in a locker room shower.

Curley must now serve four months' house arrest followed by two years' probation.

Curley was released less than a month after former university vice president Gary Schultz finished his six- to 23-month jail term for the same crime. Schultz is also serving four months' on house arrest followed by two years' probation.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2017/10/18/jerry-sandusky-no-new-trial/

Judge Denies Sandusky’s Appeal For New Trial On Child Sex Abuse Charges
October 18, 2017 5:05 PM By Greg Argos

HARRISBURG, Pa. (CBS) — A judge ruled Wednesday that Jerry Sandusky will not get a new trial on child sex abuse charges.

Centre County Judge John Foradora denied the former Penn State assistant football coach’s appeal, meaning Sandusky’s original sentence stands.

The judge’s decision is a big blow for Sandusky and his legal team, who argued he did not receive adequate representation from his lawyers during his initial 2012 trial. :pity:

“This decision is not the end of our fight by any means,” said Al Lindsay, Sandusky’s attorney. “Now we need to move along to the next chapter and what the next chapter is an appeal through the Pennsylvania Appellate Court.”

Lindsay believes Sandusky should never have been charged in the first place.

“I know what the public thinks and the news media thinks, but I know what I think. I think he’s an innocent man, a man who should never have been charged with these things,” Lindsay said.

Sandusky, 73, is serving a 30- to 60-year state prison sentence after being convicted of 45 counts of sexual abuse involving 10 boys.

Sandusky’s attorneys introduced a Post Conviction Relief Act request more than one year ago.

Initially, the hearings were held by Judge John Cleland, who also presided over the original trial, but he recused himself late last year because of the conflict of interest.

State prosecutors argued Sandusky’s original trial was fair and that he didn’t deserve a new one.

Despite this major setback, Lindsay says he’s going to continue to fight for Sandusky’s freedom.

“We’re in it for as long as it takes,” he said. “We’re in a scrap and we’re going to keep scrapping until we get what we need. And we think ultimately we’ll prevail because what happened here is just too wrong. Just too wrong.”
 
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/new...nds-Lawsuit-Against-Penn-State-455808243.html

Former Penn State Assistant Football Coach Mike McQueary Ends Lawsuit Against PSU
Former Penn State Coach Mike McQueary was awarded more than $12M last year after his civil suit trial.
By Associated Press
Published 5 hours ago

A former Penn State assistant football coach has ended his defamation and whistleblower lawsuit against the university.

Court records show Mike McQueary's attorney filed for the lawsuit to be discontinued and ended with prejudice Friday, meaning the lawsuit cannot be brought back to court.

McQueary filed his lawsuit against the university in 2012 after he lost his job following the firing of former head coach Joe Paterno.

He later testified during the child sex abuse case against the school's former defensive football coach Jerry Sandusky.

McQueary was awarded more than $12 million last year after his civil suit trial. The university had been filing a series of appeals in an attempt to overturn the verdict.

Neither side has disclosed if a settlement has been reached.
 
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/new...-Claims-Against-Jerry-Sandusky-461326533.html

Penn State Still Fighting 2 Jerry Sandusky Sexual Abuse Claim Lawsuits
In the two pending cases, the university is accused of negligence and recklessness in its handling of complaints about Sandusky
By Mark Scolforo
Published at 8:10 AM EST on Dec 5, 2017

One of two lawsuits still pending in the Jerry Sandusky child molestation scandal is nearing trial, and lawyers for the alleged victims in both cases say they have evidence Penn State administrators were not the only people at the university who knew about sex abuse by the ex-coach years before his arrest.

Both men, represented by the same team of lawyers, allege they were fondled by Sandusky in his car during separate incidents in the mid-2000s. The first of the cases is set for trial in February.

Sandusky was convicted of sexually abusing 10 boys, including one in a locker room shower at Penn State in 2001. A graduate assistant who witnessed the shower incident reported it to university administrators, but they failed to alert police. Sandusky was not arrested until 10 years later when an anonymous tip led to a new investigation — and findings of a high-level cover-up.

As a result of the delay, Sandusky was able to go on to abuse more boys.

"I believe that our case, that we are going to present to a jury, will definitively show that individuals at the university — in addition to just the administrators — concretely knew there was abuse that Sandusky had committed prior to our client," said Brian Kent, lead attorney for a man listed as John Doe in one of the cases. He declined to elaborate.

Sandusky, a onetime assistant to the late Hall of Fame coach Joe Paterno, is serving 30 to 60 years in prison. Former Penn State President Graham Spanier and two other retired administrators, vice president Gary Schultz and athletic director Tim Curley, were convicted this year of child endangerment for failing to notify authorities in 2001 of the locker room complaint.

Penn State has already paid out $109 million to settle Sandusky abuse claims by at least 34 people. The university has not provided the amount of any individual settlement. To date, not one lawsuit over Sandusky abuse claims has gone to trial.

In the two pending cases, the university is accused of negligence and recklessness in its handling of complaints about Sandusky.

Penn State has declined comment. But in a court filing in the John Doe case, university lawyers argued Penn State "owes no legal duty to a young man it did not know, where the assault happened entirely off-campus" by a former employee not related to school business.

The school's lawyers have also argued that despite claims the university knew about prior abuse by Sandusky, "that knowledge does not give rise to a duty to supervise Sandusky after he left the university's employment or to warn all people who at some point in the future could come into contact with Sandusky, no matter when, where or how."

Sandusky, now 73, has not responded to either lawsuit. He refused to leave his prison cell when attorneys in the John Doe case arrived to depose him in April.

"They wanted to take his deposition and Jerry didn't want to be deposed," said Al Lindsay, Sandusky's appellate lawyer in the criminal case.

In June, the judge in the John Doe case granted a judgment against Sandusky, meaning he was deemed liable in the case. The trial will determine how much he might owe.

John Doe says he met Sandusky sometime around 2005 through The Second Mile, a now-defunct charity for at-risk youth that Sandusky founded in 1977 and used to meet and groom many of the young men he was convicted of molesting.

Sometime in early 2007, Sandusky took the boy to visit a football coach at Bucknell University. Sandusky began touching and rubbing the boy's thigh on the way there, behavior that continued when they ate pizza together afterward, according to the suit. On the way home, Sandusky fondled him.

The Jack Doe lawsuit says he was 16 or 17 in the summer of 2003 or 2004, attending an overnight summer ice hockey camp on university property, when other players soaked his clothing with water.

The suit alleges Sandusky retrieved some dry clothes for him, and the coach "insisted on staying in the room" while the boy changed, then offered to drive him to the nearby dorm.

Once inside Sandusky's car, the suit alleges Sandusky put his hand "into plaintiff's lap and onto his penis." The teen "wrestled off Sandusky's hand," prompting Sandusky to then reach back into his lap with both hands.
 
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/new...ison-for-Sexual-Abuse-of-Girls-462837993.html

Jerry Sandusky's Son Sentenced to Prison for 14 Counts of Sexual Abuse of Girls
Published 11 minutes ago

One of Jerry Sandusky's sons was sentenced to prison Friday after pleading guilty to pressuring a teenage girl to send him naked photos and asking her teen sister to perform a sex act.

The Centre Daily Times reported that a Pennsylvania judge sentenced 42-year-old Jeffrey Sandusky to 3 to 6 years.

Sandusky pleaded guilty on the eve of trial in September to 14 counts, charges that included solicitation of statutory sexual assault and solicitation of involuntary deviate sexual intercourse.

The newspaper said Jeffrey Sandusky's attorney said there was never any physical contact between his client and the victims. :rolleyes:

Authorities said he knew the girls through their mother, and that a year ago their father turned over incriminating text messages from Jeffrey Sandusky.

A court affidavit said Sandusky told the girl he pressured for photos last year that "it's not weird because he studied medicine." Police said he directed her "to not show these texts to anyone."

Jeffrey Sandusky is one of the six children adopted by Jerry and Dottie Sandusky and has been a stalwart supporter of his father, often attending court events.

Former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky is serving 30 to 60 years in prison for sexually abusing 10 boys.

The Corrections Department said Friday that Jeffrey Sandusky was fired as a Rockview State Prison guard late last month. He had been with the agency since August 2015.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2018/01/09/psu-settles-suit-over-sandusky/

Penn State Settles Suit Over Alleged Sandusky Abuse In 2007
January 9, 2018 at 4:38 pm

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Penn State has settled a lawsuit by a man who claimed former university assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky molested him in a car in 2007, when the man was about 14 years old.

The settlement notice was posted Monday on the Philadelphia courts website and confirmed by a lawyer for the plaintiff, called John Doe in case documents.

The case had been scheduled for trial in late February, but late last month the parties told the judge they no longer needed Sandusky to be brought to Philadelphia from the state prison where he is serving a lengthy sentence.

A Penn State spokeswoman said there is only one pending civil case left related to Sandusky abuse allegations, a Philadelphia lawsuit filed under the name Jack Doe. She declined to comment on the John Doe case being settled.

The university has paid more than $109 million to settle Sandusky abuse claims by at least 35 people.

Sandusky, 73, maintains he was wrongly convicted of 45 counts of child sexual abuse in 2012 and is pursuing appeals.

John Doe was granted judgment against Sandusky last summer after Sandusky, a defendant in the case, did not respond. The trial would have determined how much he might owe in the case. Sandusky had refused to leave his prison cell when attorneys arrived to depose him in April.

Court records show John Doe claimed he met Sandusky around the summer of 2005 through The Second Mile, a charity for at-risk youth Sandusky founded in 1977.

The next year, Sandusky gave him free tickets to Penn State football games and visited him at home when he was sick.

In March 2007, John Doe claimed, Sandusky took him to visit a football coach at Bucknell University in central Pennsylvania.

He alleged Sandusky touched and rubbed his thigh on the way to meet the coach and when they ate pizza together afterward.

He claimed that on the way home, Sandusky “slowly slid his hand up (the boy’s) thigh and began grabbing, squeezing, rubbing and fondling” his genitals.

The lawsuit says state prosecutors in 2012 “recognized” John Doe as a victim of sexual abuse by Sandusky and that he testified before a grand jury.

John Doe accused Penn State of negligence and recklessness in its handling of Sandusky complaints.

The university had argued in a court filing that it “owes no legal duty” to a young man it did not know who alleged an activity that happened off-campus by a former employee unrelated to school business.
 
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/new...State-Penn-State-Abuse-Scandal-471248214.html

Some Liken Michigan State to Penn State Amid Abuse Scandal
Sandusky is serving 30 to 60 years in prison for sexually abusing 10 boys
By Ed White and David Eggert
Published at 6:02 AM EST on Jan 26, 2018 | Updated at 6:44 AM EST on Jan 26, 2018

Sports doctor Larry Nassar is on his way to prison for the rest of his life for molesting scores of young female athletes, but the scandal is far from over at Michigan State University as victims, lawmakers and a judge demand to know why he wasn't stopped years ago.

Some are likening Michigan State to Penn State University, where three senior officials, including the school's president, were sentenced to jail last year for failing to tell authorities about a sexual abuse allegation involving coach Jerry Sandusky.

Nassar, a 54-year-old former member of Michigan State's sports medicine staff, has admitted penetrating elite gymnasts and other athletes with his fingers while he was supposedly treating them for injuries.

Some of the more than 150 women and girls who have accused him said they complained to the sports medicine staff, a campus counselor and the women's gymnastics coach as far back as the late 1990s.

In Michigan, it is a misdemeanor punishable by up to three months in jail and a $500 fine for certain professionals to fail to report a suspected case of child abuse.

Lou Anna Simon, who resigned under pressure Wednesday as Michigan State's president, insisted, "There is no cover-up." But the university last week asked Michigan's attorney general to conduct a review. And in sentencing Nassar to 40 to 175 years in prison Wednesday, Judge Rosemarie Aquilina called for "a massive investigation as to why there was inaction, why there was silence."

Jennifer Paine, a Michigan lawyer who specializes in child protection law and is not involved in the Nassar case, said there are probably grounds for charging some Michigan State staff members for failing to report what victims were saying.

"The obligation to report doesn't mean anything unless people enforce. That's why it's there," she said.

No one has been charged in the scandal besides Nassar.

John Manly, an attorney who represents more than 100 victims in lawsuits, said Michigan State, USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Olympic Committee "miserably failed children." Nassar was a team doctor at USA Gymnastics, which trains Olympians.

"They had an opportunity, instead of being Penn State, to make them a beacon of how to handle this," Manly said. "It's too late. You can't fix it now."

Penn State's former president, Graham Spanier, and two other ex-administrators, Tim Curley and Gary Schultz, were prosecuted for child endangerment for not reporting a 2001 complaint about Sandusky showering with a boy. Sandusky's arrest a decade later blew up into a scandal that brought down legendary football coach Joe Paterno.

Sandusky is serving 30 to 60 years in prison for sexually abusing 10 boys. As of last year, Penn State had paid nearly $250 million in fines, settlements and other costs associated with the scandal.

Nassar has also been sentenced to 60 years in federal prison for child pornography. Federal prosecutors have declined to say if they are looking at any other aspects of the case.

Elsewhere, in Texas, the Walker County sheriff's office said it is investigating the Karolyi Ranch, which was a training site for Olympic gymnasts. Some gymnasts said Nassar assaulted them there.

In Washington, U.S. senators from both parties are calling for creation of a select committee to investigate the U.S. Olympic Committee. The NCAA said it has sent Michigan State a letter of inquiry about potential rules violations.

In the Penn State scandal, the NCAA fined the school $48 million, reduced the number of football scholarships, barred the team from postseason play and invalidated 112 victories. Some penalties were later eased.

Kyle Stephens, who was a Nassar family friend, said he molested her for years at his Lansing-area home. She said she told a campus counselor, Gary Stollak, about the abuse in 2004. Nassar met with Stollak and denied it, and no police report was made.

Stollak, now retired, testified in 2016 that he couldn't remember anything because of a stroke.

"He didn't report it, and he's a mandatory reporter," Stephens said, referring to those who are legally required to report sexual abuse. "Michigan State keeps saying that 'we didn't know.' Who should I have told? Tell me who I should have told so I know what I should have done. ... They are continuing to drag out my pain, and that is inappropriate."

A 2014 police investigation into other assault allegations ended with no charges against Nassar. The university, however, told him that he needed to have a chaperone in the room during certain exams. He was fired in 2016 for failing to do so.

Some victims say they reported Nassar to Kathie Klages, who ran camps for teen gymnasts and was Michigan State women's gymnastics coach until last February. She has denied wrongdoing.

State Sen. Margaret O'Brien said college coaches should be added to Michigan's list of mandatory reporters, which includes therapists and medical professionals. In the state House, lawmakers sent a letter to Michigan State on Thursday requesting certain reports about Nassar.
 
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/new...-New-Trial-Orders-Resentencing-505375211.html

Sandusky Gets New Sentencing, Loses Request for New Trial
Published Feb 5, 2019 at 4:01 PM | Updated at 9:35 PM EST on Feb 5, 2019
By Mark Scolforo

Seven years after Jerry Sandusky was convicted of child molestation and sentenced to decades behind bars, an appeals court has ordered a resentencing hearing for the former Penn State assistant football coach whose crimes have cost the university a fortune and triggered changes to state law.

Sandusky, 75, was sentenced in 2012 to 30 to 60 years, but a Pennsylvania Superior Court panel said that included the improper application of mandatory minimums.

In a 119-page opinion, the appeals panel struck down argument after argument that lawyers for Sandusky had made in seeking a new trial. :D

His defense lawyer, Al Lindsay, said he was disappointed but will ask the state's highest court to reconsider.

Lindsay said he was unsure if the new sentencing is likely to result in a substantially different sentence.

"I suppose it depends on the judge and what happens before the sentencing and after the sentencing," Lindsay said. He called the case "one of the most profound injustices in the history of American jurisprudence."

The state attorney general's office said it was pleased that Sandusky's convictions remained intact.

"The Superior Court has agreed with our office that it was proper for the court below to reject Sandusky's claims," said Joe Grace, a spokesman for the prosecutors. "We look forward to appearing for the new sentencing proceedings and arguing to the court as to why this convicted sex offender should remain behind bars for a long time."

Dauphin County District Attorney Fran Chardo, a veteran prosecutor not involved in the Sandusky case, said the county judge will have a lot of discretion, up to the statutory maximum, when the resentencing occurs. He was unsure how the sentence will be affected.

"It may very well result in a lesser aggregate, but not necessarily," Chardo said. "It remains to be seen."
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Sandusky had filed an ambitious appeal that argued a range of flaws occurred in the investigation, trial and sentencing, but the three-judge appeals ruled against all of them before granting him a new sentencing hearing.

Among his claims were that his lawyers should have kept him from giving a TV interview after his arrest, that his failure to testify was cited by a prosecutor and that prosecutors should have disclosed information about changes to victims' stories before trial.

Victims testified at his trial that Sandusky subjected them to a range of abuse, from grooming to violent sexual attacks. Sandusky has consistently maintained his innocence.

Lindsay said Sandusky asked him to release a statement vowing to "not rest until the public understands what has happened and decision-makers acknowledge the injustice."

"It's time to unmask those who have been deceitful and dishonest," the statement read. "It's time to expose those who have hidden personal agendas. Now is the time to present the 'real scandal' and all the damage that has been done. What has happened is a travesty. What will happen will be our legacy."

Sandusky's arrest led the university to push out Hall of Fame head coach Joe Paterno and then-university president Graham Spanier.

Penn State has paid more than $100 million to settle claims from about three dozen people who alleged Sandusky had abused them, and made a host of changes to its policies and procedures. The Sandusky scandal also resulted in a change to state laws that protect abused children.

Spanier and two other retired Penn State administrators, vice president Gary Schultz and athletic director Tim Curley, were convicted last year of child endangerment for failing to notify authorities in 2001 of a complaint about Sandusky and a boy in a team shower. Spanier has an appeal pending before the state Supreme Court.
 
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/new...-Spanier-Request-Appeal-Denied-506208941.html

Penn State Ex-President Spanier's Request for Appeal Denied
Published Feb 22, 2019 at 8:13 AM | Updated at 9:44 AM EST on Feb 22, 2019

Graham+Spanier+PSU+Abuse+Lawsuit.jpg


Penn State's president when the Jerry Sandusky child molestation scandal erupted may soon be going to jail after Pennsylvania's highest court declined Thursday to hear the appeal of his conviction for child endangerment.

The state Supreme Court ruled it will not take up Graham Spanier's appeal of the misdemeanor conviction related to Spanier's handling of a 2001 complaint about Sandusky showering with a boy in the football team locker room.

Spanier, 70, had argued the trial judge and a lower appeals court wrongly relied on a statute of limitations law that prosecutors never cited.

He has been out on bail and has not begun serving a sentence of two months in jail and two months' house arrest.

Spanier's lawyer, Sam Silver, said they were disappointed by the court's decision, while prosecutors said they were pleased.

"No one is above the law, and my office will continue to pursue anyone who looks the other way in the face of child sexual abuse," Attorney General Josh Shapiro said in a statement. "There are consequences for failing to protect children in Pennsylvania."

Spanier's lawyers have said that for the relevant provision of the state's statute of limitations to apply, prosecutors would have needed to prove the boy in the shower in 2001 was less than 14 years and 11 days old. Referred to as "Victim 2" in court records and testimony, the boy's identity has been disputed, with prosecutors saying they are not sure who he is.

At the lower-level Superior Court, two of three judges on the appeals panel turned down Spanier's arguments that too much time had passed to charge him, that he was not legally obligated to care for the boy, and that he should not have been charged because he did not supervise children directly.

But the third Superior Court judge said Spanier should have been told at a reasonable time before trial that prosecutors planned to rely on an exception to the two-year statute of limitations. She said she would have reversed his conviction.

Two of Spanier's top aides when he was Penn State's president, former vice president Gary Schultz and former athletic director Tim Curley, pleaded guilty to child endangerment and testified against him in 2017. They have since served county jail sentences.

Spanier, who did not take the stand at trial in his own defense, has said Sandusky's attack on the boy was characterized to him as horseplay.

He told the sentencing judge he regretted he "did not intervene more forcefully."

Spanier was forced out as Penn State's president within days of the November 2011 arrests of Sandusky, Curley and Schultz. He was himself charged criminally a year later.

Penn State said Thursday Spanier remains a tenured faculty member and is on paid administrative leave. The school does not release his salary.

Sandusky is serving 30 to 60 years on a 45-count child sexual abuse conviction. He maintains he was wrongly convicted and recently won a Superior Court decision that granted him a new sentencing but did not give him the new trial he sought.

The scandal has cost the university more than a quarter-billion dollars, including payments to those who said Sandusky abused them as boys.
 
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