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Mark Battaglia Speaks Out

Posted on March 18, 2013 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Last week’s PSU BoT meeting in Hershey, attended by dozens of former Nittany Lions football lettermen, has faded to black, taking that long ride up the Hershey Highway into the fecal wasteland that has become a metaphor for the board’s (in)action. As expected, Trustee Kenneth Frazier defended “his” Freeh report while others — particularly Anthony Lubrano — decried it, representative of the intractable schism that has pervaded the Penn State community for sixteen months and counting. Of the comments from the peanut gallery, I thought Battaglia’s were the most incisive.

“I’m sorry, Mister Frazier. This ‘move on’ thing is not happening.”  —Mark Battaglia

On Thursday, Frazier had launched a tirade of defensively offensive remarks to board candidate Bill Cluck, an attorney, who mentioned to him that it appropriate to question the Freeh report because it has come under question from many directions and would not hold up legally in court. Frazier went off:

“I believe that we are entitled to look at the words and contemporaneous emails and other documents that draw the conclusions that we need to draw as a university. We are not subject to the criminal beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard, and you’re a lawyer, so you can stop pretending that you think we are. We can take employment actions, we can take corrective actions without any need to resort to the so-called due process, reasonable doubt standard, and I don’t care if they are acquitted. And you know the difference. If you cared about that, you are one of the few people in this country that looks like you who actually believes the O.J. Simpson not guilty verdict was correct. The fact of the matter is, those documents say what they say, and no amount of hand waving will ever change what those documents say.”

So, on Friday, Frazier apologized for his untoward remarks, but held his ground in pooh-poohing the Paterno report:

“Because of its limited scope and intent, it does not provide a full or complete description of a historical record and it does not even comment on the recommendations in the Freeh report. As such, it provides little help to the university and decision makers going forward… Because it doesn’t even evaluate the conduct of individuals or many of the subjects addressed in the Freeh report other than with respect to Coach Paterno, it simply does not address any of the findings or documents in the Freeh report. The facts are the facts — and the contemporaneous emails and other documentation are among the most important evidence produced.

“We cannot put heads in the sand and pretend that children were not hurt or that the documents do not exist… When it comes to child sexual abuse, we, the adults in this community and every other community, must prevent the preventable. In order to do so, we must report the reportable. It is that simple and straightforward.

“It is crystal clear that the board cannot and should not reinvestigate the Freeh investigation. Any attempt to try and rewrite history will be damaging to Penn State’s effort to move past this horrible tragedy.”

Oh, boy! Here we go again with the “laser focus on the future of the university” crap. Let’s just sweep the who sordid mess under the rug and no one will notice the huge, ugly lump in the middle of the room! Yeah, the facts are the facts; however, the Freeh report was light on facts and heavy on inference. Frazier plays the vvvvvvvvicccccccccctimmmmmmmmmmms card in yet another simplistic attempt to preempt retorts, but that worked about as well with Lubrano as did the race card with Cluck. Said Lubrano:

“The one area we don’t focus much on is education, which is ironic given that this is an institution of higher learning. So what I would suggest to the board to take Louis Freeh up on his offer where he said in his July 12, 2012 press conference that he would come and meet with the students and the faculty and others to answer questions at the appropriate time. Well, it seems to me that this is a very appropriate time.

“Now I understand your point, Ken, that you don’t want to rewrite history. But I’m not sure the history is correct… This isn’t grandstanding. This is a serious matter. This is a very, very serious matter. Like the rest of you, I love this institution… I want to move forward. Absolutely, positively I want to move forward. But I can’t, in good conscience, move forward at this time. It’s just not possible for me.”

The inner circle of the BoT has been wanting us to “move forward” since Day One. In other words, we shouldn’t question their wisdom. They are obviously infallible.

But what’s this crap about rewriting history? What the hell do they think the Freeh report did? By misrepresenting facts and making spurious inferences, it sure as hell did its share of rewriting history. Now, this Frazier schmuck is defending the indefensible with bluster and platitudes. Lubrano is right. We cannot just move on, as Frazier and his colleagues would like us to.

I’ll tell you what I think. I think Frazier is incompetent and belligerently defensive, just like charlatans tend to be. The Freeh report was his baby and he won’t countenance any questions about his (and Freeh’s) superficial investigation and hastily derived conclusions, which were probably foregone before the report was even commissioned. I continue to think that the report essentially was an $8 million boondoggle whose outcome was pre-ordained by the inner circle. Whenever the report is questioned, the vvvvvvvvicccccctimmmmmmmms card is played and we’re told that we must “move forward.” The questions are never answered. Nevertheless, given that the loudly incompetent Frazier as the front man for the whole fandango, sooner or later someone or something is going to crack, and this turkey wants to be around when the shit hits the fan!

It is interesting that with the election forthcoming, the BoT is considering proposals to reduce the size of the board, to put gags on members, and be empowered to kick people off the board who speak out. Here is the exact wording of the proposal that would restrict the free speech of board members:

“It is expected that each Trustee will… Speak openly, freely and candidly within the Board and publicly support decisions reached by the Board; it being recognized and understood that once the Board of Trustees, as the governing body of the University, makes a decision, it can be counterproductive and potentially damaging to the University for individual Trustees to publicly criticize or attempt to subvert such decision…”

Hellllllllooooooooo! If Washington ran that way, it would be Pyongyang! Communist stifling of free speech! Toe the party line… or else! WTF? Is this America?

What’s next? Jailing public critics like me for speaking up? Holy crap, I better check out the airfare to Siberia! I’ll volunteer for the gulag before the PSU BoT Thought Police come knocking on my Turkey Coop door. I can’t even imagine the cruel and unusual punishment that would await me. Horrors!

Yeah, that’s a bit of an overreaction, but you get my point. Why in the hell should trustees who dissent just roll over and play dead? We know how the BoT works — that the elected members have little power to overcome the decisions made by the inner circle. So now, they want to nullify the elected members by first reducing their numbers, then gagging them, and then threatening them that they’ll be kicked off the board if they open their mouths? Who’d they learn that from, Mark Emmert?

I repeat: WTF!!?!?!

I’m sorry about the digression, but that whole thing pisses me off. Back to the topic at hand.

As I mentioned at the top of this tirade, Mark Battaglia made some comments that I think are worth reading:

“Sadly, to date, there’s only one man who has admitted that with the benefit of hindsight that he wished he would have done more. You see Joe Paterno held us to a higher standard as players. In the classroom, in our lives, on the football field. And we’re here today to hold you, the Board, to a higher standard. More specifically, those who have already been held to a higher standard because they played for Joe Paterno or they had brothers or nephews who played for Joe Paterno. They knew Joe Paterno like we knew Joe Paterno.

“In the huddle, when the game is on the line, they looked in his eyes, they saw the man, they knew the man. And yet, they wouldn’t take his call. They wouldn’t make a call. They sat around silently. Worse yet, maybe they led the effort to fire Joe. Why? Was it personal? Did they let a personal issue lead to a potentially $100 million debacle?

“Joe always said ‘you’re never as good as you think you are when you win and you’re never as bad as you think you are when you lose.’ Good news here is that we are losing, we didn’t lose, but we are losing the battle. We need to change the strategy. We need the leadership from those very people who played for Joe to lead us out of this thing by changing. Paint yourself in the corner with this Freeh report. I’m sorry Mr. Frazier… This ‘move on’ thing is not happening. The alumni are not buying it. So Joe said ‘you have to believe in your heart that you are destined to do great things.’ You can do that. There’s still time. There are 500,000 alumni out there hoping and praying that you accept the challenge.”

“This ‘move on’ thing is not happening!” Tell it just like it is, Mark! I love it!

Finally, I’ll share a video that expresses my wishes quite well.

Who will be our George Foreman?

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Filed Under: Penn State Football, Penn State Scandal Tagged With: Anthony Lubrano, board of trustees, Ken Frazier, Mark Battaglia

Sudden Impact: Habemus Turcia!

Posted on March 12, 2013 Written by The Nittany Turkey

The Cardinals are meeting in Rome to choose a new pope, so I thought it was a good time to resurface. Reading my crap will give you something to do while awaiting the white smoke and the joyful proclamation, “Habemus papam!”

“It’s the Russian!” —George Faber, The Shoes of the Fisherman

By the way, those of you who are inspired by the papal selection process might want to check out this turkey’s favorite pope movie, The Shoes of the Fisherman, a 1968 classic starring Anthony Quinn as a Ukrainian archbishop who served twenty years doing hard labor as a political prisoner in Siberia before going to Rome and being elevated to Cardinal. Set during a Sino-Soviet feud at the height of the Cold War, the drama unfolds with the sitting pope kicking the bucket and our hero, Kiril Lakota, selected as his successor after long deliberations by the College of Cardinals. David Janssen (of “The Fugitive” TV series) plays an American reporter named George Faber (probably also a CIA agent) who serves as our trusty narrator.

I thought Lakota was an Native American tribe, not a Ukrainian name. Artificially Sweetened has told me that her mother told her that her mother told her that Ukrainian names end in “enko.” So this guy should have been Archbishop Kirilenko, who coincidentally used to play center for the Utah Jazz. But I digress.

 

Our Sudden Impact topic for today involves the Penn State BoT, the Freeh Report, and some potential shitstorm material. It seems that some emails were leaked that paint the Freeh report as the made-to-order contrivance we all thought it was. These emails, unearthed in a “right to know” request filed with the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s office by blogger Ryan Bagwell, suggest that there were strong ties between the Freeh “investigators” and the Sandusky prosecutors, tainting the ostensible independence of the Freeh investigation.

Specifically, upon the Tickle Monster’s conviction in June last year, Freeh investigator Gregory Paw emailed Frank Fina, the lead Sandusky prosecutor saying, “I am very proud of you and the entire prosecution team.”

Fina responded the next day, “Thanks were happy too. [sic] It was great working with you guys.”

Later, in July, when the Freeh report was issued, Fina congratulated Paw in an email. “Truly great work.

I’ve read a couple different accounts, but Bagwell’s is obviously the gold standard since it was he who dug up the emails.

The Freeh report was a shoddy job with a myriad flaws, as was driven home by the Paterno report. However, as more evidence piles up, this turkey’s bullshit detector is flashing red, spinning, and blaring like one of those German Gestapo polizeiwagens in a World War II movie. The clear question is: Did the Penn State Board of Trustees commission the Freeh group to create a boondoggle report so the BoT could blame Curley, Paterno, Schultz, and Spanier and save their own asses? Evidence is mounting that this was the case.

Surma and Peetz are exiting gracefully, before the proverbial shit hits the fan. However, the aroma is pretty ripe in that boardroom, and the fan is on. It is this turkey’s hope that few more revelations such as Bagwell’s will precipitate the much anticipated fecal maelstrom we all hope and pray for.

(I’m told that it’s now acceptable to end a sentence with a preposition.)

******

How, exactly, was the Freeh group hired by the board, and what were the BoT’s directives established during the hiring process? Funny you should ask, inasmuch as a copy of the engagement letter has emerged. The letter, signed by Louis J. Freeh and amended presumably by the PSUBoT or its attorneys then countersigned by Steve Garban, Chair, Board of Trustees, and K.C. Frazier, as Chair, Special Investigations Task Force on December 2, 2011, is available at Scribd. (The amendments were mainly changing “Special Committee” to “Investigative Task Force”, as the latter presumably has more bureaucratic bullshit appeal.) I’ll give you a brief Turkey interpretation of the main points of the letter.

1. Scope. Freeh, Sporkin & Sullivan, LLP (FSS) has been engaged to perform “an independent, full and complete investigation of the recently publicized allegations of sexual abuse at the facilities and the alleged failure of PSU personnel to report such sexual abuse to appropriate police and government authorities.

The report will contain FSS’s findings concerning:

  • failures that occurred in the reporting process
  • the cause for those failures
  • who had knowledge of the allegations of sexual abuse
  • how those allegations were handled by Trustees, administrators, coaches and other staff

The report will make recommendations for actions to be taken to ensure that those and similar failures do not occur again.

Now, here’s some cool stuff. “It is understood … that FSS will act under the sole direction of the Task Force… It is also understood that FSS’s investigation will be completed in parallel to, but independent of, any other investigation that is conducted by any policy agencies, governmental authorities or agencies, or other organizations within or outside of PSU, and will not interfere with any such other investigations.” (Emphasis mine.)

Well, now. How about that! Apparently, parallel lines do meet.

Finally, the time frame for the report is left wide-ass open!

2. Rates. If you’re looking for some juicy ammo with respect to FSS billing rates, you won’t find them, as the actual amounts have been redacted prior to publication of the letter. Too bad, because rates for Freeh, FSS partners, investigators, non-partner lawyers, and paraprofessionals were all spelled out in the letter. The Magic Marker obscurations are about all the same length, though, and all are long enough to hide four digits. No dollar sign was needed because each amount was succeeded by “USD”, meaning United States Dollars, that ever-moving target being inexorably devalued by the profligacy of the corrupt federal government we the people elected (but I digress). What the hell — you all know that the damn Freeh report cost in excess of six million buckaroos, so why belabor the trivial little components?

3. Disbursements. They can (and did) charge for travel, Lexis Nexus research, international phone calls (I bet there were plenty of calls to research the Sandusky family in Poland), but not paper clips and staples — except if they need office supplies that are “specifically required for a particular engagement”. Oops, yeah, they can charge for paper clips if they deem them specifically required.

4. Payment Terms. Billed monthly, due and payable within thirty days after billing, and late charges accrue at 1% per month on the unpaid balance.

5. Retention of Third Parties. If they need outside help, they can bring in whoever they please. They’ll notify the Task Force with the expected fees and costs. One of those third parties will be Freeh Group International Solutions, LLC, in which Louis J. Freeh is a partner and has controlling interest, as he does in FSS. FSS is a law firm; FGIS is a separate investigative and consulting group.

See, this way, Freeh can charge whatever the hell he wants even though the rates for FSS were spelled out under “Rates”.

6. Confidentiality and Responding to Subpoenas and Other Requests for Information. The work is covered by attorney-client privilege, unless it is waived by the parties. If FSS or any third-party (read FGIS) is required to respond to a subpoena or other formal request for information, we’ll let the Task Force know so the BoT can object, but you’re going to have to pay FSS for our time one way or the other.

7. General Responsibilities of Attorney and Client. FSS produces a report; PSUBoT pays. BoT will give FSS information but won’t get in the way. Oh, and by the way, if FSS screws up, Penn State is on the hook, as expressed in this antigrammatical classic, “… the Trustees have agreed to indemnify FSS it’s [sic] partners, employees, agents …”

8. Waiver of Future Conflicts. FSS can pull out whenever they feel there’s a conflict of interest.

9. Engagement Limited to Identified Client. FSS’s client is the Task Force established by the PSUBoT and no one else.

10. Termination. Either party can terminate upon written notice. At that point, PSUBoT must pay up.

11. Client Files. FSS will maintain a file (“Client File”) which will remain their property along with the Work Product, which is presumably the final report.

The closing paragraph gets a bit defensive about why such a lengthy, formal letter is necessary. “While ordinarily we might prefer to choose a less formal method of confirming the terms of our engagement than a written statement such as this, it has been our experience that a letter such as this is useful both to FSS and to the client. Moreover, in certain instances, FSS is required by law to memorialize these matters in writing. In any event, we would request that the Trustees and the Task Force review this letter and, if it comports with your and the Task Force’s understanding of our respective responsibilities, so indicate by returning a signed copy to [Freeh] at your earliest convenience so as not to impede the commencement of work…”

Uh, huh. So they already agreed to this crap informally (and God knows what was really said during those closed-door negotiations), and now Freeh is worried that this formalization might draw scrutiny from some hostile, prying eyes. Sarah Ganim was busy interviewing with CNN, so in reality, no eyes were prying. So, Freeh tells the BoT to sign the thing quickly so the deadlineless work might commence.

Are we having fun yet?

So, the letter didn’t state the subterranean mission explicitly. However, having been a consultant myself, I know that engagement letters and stated missions often times belie the true mission of a consulting gig. An old, wise management consultant I used to work with named “Fitz” (I forget whether that was short for Fitzgerald or Fitzpatrick) used to call it “solve for X” — in other words, dig beneath the surface and find out what the client really wants. For example, many times they’re looking to justify firing a specific vice president or regional manager, but the assignment is really couched as the effects of gamma rays on man-in-the-moon marigolds. But I digress (that’s three times — who’s counting?).

Did the “Task Force” or “Special Committee” ever intimate to Freeh that admitting fault in the Sandusky matter and scapegoating Curley, Paterno, Schultz, and Spanier was the desired result?

I keep asking the question. Someday, we’ll know.

PS4RS comments about the letter:

March 11, 2013 —- Beginning in April 2012, long before the issuance of the Freeh Report, officials of Penn Staters for Responsible Stewardship began requesting a copy of the engagement letter of Freeh, Sporkin & Sullivan. Those requests continued as it became apparent that FSS was not working for the University but was instead acting on behalf of the Trustees, as outlined in the PS4RS review of the Freeh Report in September 2012.

Now, nearly one full year after our initial request, the FSS engagement letter has finally been released and its confirms our worst fears: contrary to what the public, the media, and even the NCAA were led to believe, Freeh Sporkin & Sullivan was not hired by Penn State University, nor was that firm acting as counsel to Penn State. Instead, that firm was hired by the Board of Trustees and, as such, FSS’ ethical obligation was to the Board of Trustees and not to the University.

This is far more than semantics – this goes to the very nature of which entity was owed an ethical duty by FSS. Sadly, that entity was NOT Penn State. In light of this incredibly significant disclosure, it is imperative that the public, the press, and the NCAA review the work of FSS in a far different light, given that the firm was neither engaged by nor working for the benefit of Penn State University. This is yet another epic failure of the part of the Board of Trustees in their stewardship of Penn State.

This is a stretch for me. Sometimes PS4RS hits the mark; sometimes they miss by a mile, and this is one of those latter cases. Making the point that the Freeh report was commissioned by and for the BoT and not the University makes sense only if one subscribes to the PS4RS belief that the BoT is operating at cross-purposes with the University. Unfortunately, the BoT is the ruling body, such as it is, whether PS4RS likes it or not. Who the hell else would have commissioned an investigation? Assuming that it was appropriate for the BoT to commission the report, who the hell else should receive it? The client of record cannot be a diffuse entity. Who is authorized to sign contracts for the University? The BoT. PS4RS goes out of its way to impugn the BoT and in many cases they are right. This one, however, makes them seem like they’re blowing wind.

******

Penn State football historian and commentator Lou Prato is unhappy with the revelation that Penn State had passed a new personnel policy on January 14 that required national searches for hiring all head coaches, as well as associate athletic directors and athletic directors. This is pursuant to a Freeh recommendation, obviously intended to break the perceived inbreeding of the PSU athletic program. In his article for BWI, Prato declares the recommendation illogical and disputes the notion of inbreeding.

I’m still catching up on Penn State and Papal happenings, so I’ll sign off for now. There’s plenty of stuff to think about in matters Freeh. Anyone want to speculate on what happens next?

Thanks to Joe and RD for passing me tidbits during my hiatus.

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Filed Under: Penn State Football, Penn State Scandal Tagged With: board of trustees, Freeh Report, Pennsylvania Attorney General

Open Letter from Trustee Joel Myers

Posted on March 1, 2013 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Reprinted below is an open letter sent by BoT member Joel Myers to those who have communicated with him regarding the NCAA sanctions and the Sandusky situation.

Myers has been vocal about his position regarding the NCAA sanctions from the start. Don’t expect that to change. Read my report of his impassioned speech to the BoT at a retreat last August.  In this letter, he calls upon the NCAA to admit its wrongdoing and fix it.

This is a great time for jumping on the NCAA, so I like the timing of Myers’ letter. Keep up the pressure.

From: Joel Myers <myersj@accuweather.com>
Sent: Thu, Feb 28, 2013 4:53 pm
Subject: From Joel Myers

This is in response to the many emails I have received over the last couple of months.  I am taking the liberty of also sending it to those who have corresponded with me previously.

Under the guise of helping children, Jerry Sandusky victimized them. Those victims continue to suffer to this day. Some were victimized on our campus, and we grieve and take as much responsibility for that as is humanly possible.

By shining the light on what happened and becoming a leader against child sexual abuse, Penn State is working to save tens of thousands of potential future victims nationwide from a similar fate, as well as help those who have suffered here. Education and awareness is the key to reducing sexual abuse, which is a plague upon this nation. Education is what we are all about. One in four girls and one in six boys are sexually abused. Sexual abuse is not a rarity. It is all too common in this society. We are learning the extent it has happened not only at Penn State but at other colleges, universities and institutions of all kinds.

Jerry Sandusky is convicted as a sick and monstrous man and the courts will judge others alleged to have enabled him to continue, and that is fair and appropriate.

But two wrongs do not make a right.  And as I have been saying from the hour that the NCAA sanctions were forced upon Rod Erickson, under threat, they were neither just nor appropriate.  In its rush to judgment the NCAA took unprecedented actions against Penn State based solely on its incorrect interpretation of the Freeh Report and without any due diligence or due process and in clear violation of its own rules. By doing so, the NCAA wronged hundreds of thousands of innocents through the sanctions it imposed upon Penn State and did untold damage to our institution.

When the Board first found out about the Sandusky situation it took immediate action, and hired Freeh as Special Investigative Counsel (SIC) to provide an independent report so that we could take corrective actions in governance, structure and administrative procedures where necessary.  Freeh had seemed credible based on the positions he held such as FBI Director.

A report can only be accepted or adopted by the Penn State Board of Trustees through a majority vote, which never occurred in the case of the Freeh Report.  Contrary to the belief of many, it is important to make clear that the Freeh Report was never accepted nor was it adopted by the Board under the Charter of the University.

Freeh’s report and his speech in front of a nationwide audience at the time he released his report were presented like an indictment, drawing what Freeh characterized as “reasonable” conclusions. Unfortunately Freeh, under the light of the television camera, made harmful statements that went beyond what was in his actual, written report.  And now, the recently released independent Thornburgh, Clemente and Berlin Reports each suggest there are flaws in both the facts and the conclusions of the Freeh Report.

As I have previously stated on many occasions, I strongly hold that the NCAA should never have implemented sanctions against Penn State based on the Freeh report for many reasons and the report was not commissioned for this purpose.  The criticisms presented by respected reviewers about the facts and conclusions of the Freeh Report would seem to add additional credence to my previous concerns.

Freeh and certainly the NCAA misunderstood what was talked about as a “culture of reverence” around the football program.  To most Penn Staters this does not mean that football was out of control, or as Ed Ray said a “football first” culture.  I believe the term “reverence” meant there has been respect among the Penn State nation, including the faculty, staff, Administration, students, and alumni, because Penn State has always stood for the highest levels of integrity of academics, including real grades, real courses, real class attendance, real performance in the class room and very high graduation rates by our student athletes from a prestigious and demanding university.  I experienced that personally as a faculty member over 17 years and other faculty members at Penn State will attest to a similar experience.  That type of reverence should be supported by the NCAA and all who value the contributions to society of institutions of higher learning.

Regarding the Freeh report, although some of the facts and conclusions appear to have been wrong, that does not mean his recommendations are wrong.  It is the Board’s duty to consider all serious recommendations to improve Penn State and to implement reforms and take any other appropriate actions that are in the best interest of the University – those recommendations provided by Freeh, as well as the suggestions from the Auditor General, Faculty Senate and any others whose suggestions that the Board believes will lead to better governance and administration I believe will be adopted.

George Mitchell (former Senate Majority Leader, one of the most highly respected people in the United States, who has served as a special envoy for Presidents of the United States for Northern Ireland and Middle East peace, and negotiated for Major League baseball, and who is universally respected for his credibility and judgment) was appointed the independent Athletics Integrity Monitor pursuant to Penn State’s Consent Decree with the NCAA.  In his first quarterly report in November, he stated “Penn State’s Board of Trustees and its administration appear determined to implement, swiftly and in good faith, the recommendations for reform that were identified in the Freeh Report … dedicated substantial time and resources to accomplishing these objectives.”

Senator Mitchell also appeared personally before the Board in January and expanded on his report, took questions from Board members, including me, praised Penn State’s work in implementing recommendations, and sent a positive message of cooperation and progress – this from one of the most respected and esteemed individuals in the nation.

We can not change the past, but we can do all the right things going forward.  Penn State has become a world leader in the fight to prevent child abuse, including establishing many new policies, procedures and positions, and training and educating more than 10,000 people in various aspects of child abuse. If there is any good from this tragedy, it is the spotlight that has been shined upon this epidemic of child abuse and the efforts to stop it.

What Penn State has accomplished in moving quickly to make positive changes goes far above and beyond what many could have imagined. This establishes Penn State as a clear leader in ethical and moral standards in intercollegiate athletics.

I call on the NCAA and the news media to recognize this – to acknowledge that whatever happened in the past we dealt with quickly and out in the open and that Penn State, as an institution, is moving vigorously to do the right thing.

In fact, by issuing the sanctions, the NCAA took the exact wrong action, not only violating their own rules and procedures, but additionally forcing Penn State’s President to violate the very principles of the Freeh report’s recommendations by accepting the sanctions without briefing, consultation or approval from the Board. Whether intentional or not, these actions and the ensuing damage to Penn State has cost the university hundreds of millions of dollars.

I again and vigorously call upon the NCAA to immediately remove the harmful and counterproductive sanctions.  One, they were based on an inaccurate interpretation of the Freeh findings.  Two, they were in clear violation of the NCAA’s own rules.  Three, they have wronged thousands of innocents.  Four, they have damaged the University.  Five, they have sent the exact opposite and wrong message to people and institutions throughout the nation: that swift and decisive action to address and cure a bad situation is to be condemned, not rewarded.

The NCAA was wrong and it is time for them to admit it and do the right thing themselves.

 Joel N. Myers is founder, president and chairman of the board of AccuWeather, Inc., an American commercial weather service. AccuWeather provides forecasts and data to over 175,000 clients around the world and serves millions more through its free website, AccuWeather.com. AccuWeather’s global headquarters is located in State College, Pennsylvania, and employs more than 400 people, over 70% of whom are Penn State graduates. He has been a member of the Penn State Board of Trustees since 1982.

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Filed Under: Penn State Football, Penn State Scandal Tagged With: board of trustees, Joel Myers, NCAA

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  • Week 52 Mounjaro Update: Steroid Shot Sparks Spooky Sugar Spike June 2, 2025
  • Week 51 Mounjaro Update: Wake Up and Smell the Coffee! May 27, 2025

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Whodat Turkey?

The Nittany Turkey is a retired techno-geek who thinks he knows something about Penn State football and everything else in the world. If there's a topic, we have an opinion on it, and you know what "they" say about opinions! Most of what is posted here involves a heavy dose of hip-shooting conjecture, but unlike some other blogs, we don't represent it as fact. Read More…

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