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Home Archives for child molesting

Hard Times at Old Main

Posted on November 7, 2011 Written by The Nittany Turkey

In a not so stunning development, Penn State Athletic Director Tim Curley and Acting Vice President of Finance and Business Affairs Gary Schultz have stepped down from their upper echelon administrative posts at the university. ???? ????? ?? ??????? After an emergency board of trustees executive meeting this evening, President Graham Spanier announced that Curley would take administrative leave to devote full time to his criminal defense, while Schultz will return to retirement. ???? 365 ?????

The other action taken today by the university was to ban Sandusky from the campus, a move this Turkey feels is too little and too late. Taken now, it is symbolic and meaningless. It will not help the children who have been allegedly victimized over the years by Sandusky due to negligence by the university. When the first incident was reported in 1998 was the time for this step to have been taken; doing so could have possibly prevented some of the incidents that followed. Instead, the university police buried the report and Sandusky was allowed to return, retire, and maintain an on-campus presence with full use of facilities due to his emeritus status. ???? ?????? Those facilities included the saunas, showers, and locker rooms where some of the alleged improprieties occurred.

Spanier will be issuing a statement in the morning. There likely will be more surprises as the day wears on and, of course, your Turkey will be here to comment on them.

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Filed Under: Current Events, Penn State Football, Penn State Scandal Tagged With: child molesting, college football, Gary Schultz, Graham Spanier, Jerry Sandusky, Nittany Lions, Penn State, Penn State University, Sanduskygate, showergate, Tim Curley

Paterno Makes Statement about Sanduskygate (Updated)

Posted on November 6, 2011 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Since the time I wrote the previous post about the Sandusky morass, Joe Paterno has issued a statement of his position with regard to the allegations. No doubt written by university attorneys, or at least edited by them, Paterno’s statement is troubling to this Turkey, because either he is lying to protect Tim Curley and Gary Schultz (and ostensibly, the university) or Mike McQueary lied to the grand jury about what he saw Sandusky doing in the shower with the ten year old Second Mile youth in 2002. Here’s Joe’s statement, with my comments interspersed (in Italics):

If true, the nature and amount of charges made are very shocking to me and all Penn Staters. While I did what I was supposed to with the one charge brought to my attention, like anyone else involved I can’t help but be deeply saddened these matters are alleged to have occurred.

Sue and I have devoted our lives to helping young people reach their potential. The fact that someone we thought we knew might have harmed young people to this extent is deeply troubling. If this is true we were all fooled, along with scores of professionals trained in such things, and we grieve for the victims and their families. They are in our prayers.

If Joe had ended the statement right here, it would have been fine. However he seems to have felt the need (or the lawyers did) to go further, apparently with the hope of exonerating Curley and Schultz of their perjury charges.

As my grand jury testimony stated, I was informed in 2002 by an assistant coach that he had witnessed an incident in the shower of our locker room facility. It was obvious that the witness was distraught over what he saw, but he at no time related to me the very specific actions contained in the Grand Jury report. Regardless, it was clear that the witness saw something inappropriate involving Mr. Sandusky. As coach Sandusky was retired from our coaching staff at that time, I referred the matter to university administrators.

This is in conflict with Paterno’s testimony to the grand jury, to wit: “Joseph V. Paterno testified to receiving the graduate assistant’s report at his home on a Saturday morning. Paterno testified that the graduate assistant was very upset. Paterno called Tim Curley, Penn State Athletic Director and Paterno’s immediate superior, to his home the very next day, a Sunday and reported to him that the graduate assistant had seen Jerry Sandusky in the Lasch Building showers fondling or doing something of a sexual nature to a young boy.” [Emphasis mine. —TNT]

[Thanks to K.B. for pointing out my omission. —TNT]

Paterno’s lawyered up statement above uses the words “…very specific actions contained in the Grand Jury report.” Obviously, Joe’s testimony does not make clear what “very specific actions” occurred between Sandusky and the boy in the shower; however, his grand jury testimony, albeit nebulous, does allude to “fondling or doing something of a sexual nature.”

So, Paterno is accusing McQueary of lying to the grand jury. Is he throwing McQueary to the wolves to save Curley and Schultz? If so, I and countless other fans and alums have been wrong about Paterno’s honesty all these years. I am seriously disappointed. Is Paterno just another university official taking care of his own?

By the way, Paterno knew that McQueary was a GA, not an assistant coach, in 2002. Was this an honest error on Joe’s part, or did he miss it in the paragraph that was written for him by the university attorneys?

I understand that people are upset and angry, but let’s be fair and let the legal process unfold. In the meantime I would ask all Penn Staters to continue to trust in what that name represents, continue to pursue their lives every day with high ideals and not let these events shake their beliefs nor who they are.

This sounds much more like Joe than the previous paragraph. I would expect him, as always, to reiterate that those people charged are innocent until proven guilty. And how many times have we heard him tell us to be patient and let the legal process unfold? Yeah, that’s Joe.

Obviously, there will be much more to come on the Sandusky affair. I intend to comment on issues as they arise.

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Filed Under: Current Events, General, Penn State Football, Penn State Scandal Tagged With: child molesting, college football, Gary Schultz, Graham Spanier, Jerry Sandusky, Nittany Lions, Penn State, Penn State University, Sanduskygate, Tim Curley

Weighing in on the Sandusky Affair

Posted on November 6, 2011 Written by The Nittany Turkey

As a Penn State blogger who worked in a public university for 13 years, I feel a need to express my feelings about the sordid mess Penn State is in over Jerry Sandusky and his alleged exploits with young boys. Although Sandusky, Curley, Schultz, Spanier, Paterno, and McQueary, the major players, are innocent until proven guilty, a sacred principle of our society, I need to make some worst case assumptions here. This is in no means an attempt to try those who are charged with offenses here in my blog; the assumption of guilt of some of them is merely a “what-if?” on my part. Obviously, if everybody is innocent, there’s nothing to speculate about. We’re not here to pat these men on the back for the good job they’ve done; we’re here to think through the situation if the worst case comes to pass.

For the complete details, just in case you’re not up to date, please read the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s press release. If you’d like excruciating details, read the grand jury presentment.

Let’s start out with Sandusky. Things look bleak for Jerry. Those of us on the outside looking in knew something was up in 1999 when he suddenly retired, but we could not have guessed that it would be multiple counts of child molestation. Behind the scenes, things were happening at Penn State. Ass-covering administrators were no doubt running around like chickens with their heads cut off.

“It is typical for public universities to want to handle bad situations internally so they don’t get blown out of proportion by the media.”

It is typical for public universities to want to handle bad situations internally so they don’t get blown out of proportion by the media. Frequently, the effort to keep elements of sordid affairs under wraps borders on paranoia. I mentioned that I worked for a public university for 13 years. During that time, I witnessed several scandals swept under the rug because administration officials wanted to protect the university’s reputation and not impede the flow of large donations. One such scandal, which I personally unearthed, involved a professor abstracting funds from an NSF grant for personal use. This was a big deal, which if handled poorly would harm the university chances of getting future grants from NSF, a huge funder of research grants. I was called into an associate dean’s office and told that he and the department chair would handle the situation — essentially, thanks for dumping this mess in our laps, now go away. That wasn’t good enough for me. I told the ivory tower servant that I wouldn’t rest until the professor in question was fired and returned the money to the university, and if he didn’t want to pursue the matter, I would be happy to sit down with the State Auditor first thing in the morning. That didn’t make any friends for me, but I eventually got what I wanted. I stuck around long enough to insure it: the professor was hauled into a meeting with the president, provost, and department chair, and given two options, resign voluntarily, pay back the money, and keep his pension; or fight it and be charged with a felony. He wisely chose the former.

The story above has a connection with what I’ll write later about Curley, Schultz, and Paterno, but now I’ll get back to Sandusky.

There is evidence that Penn State dealt with the Sandusky child molestation issue behind closed doors when it first came to light in 1999. The university conducted its investigation, involving the university and State College police departments presumably to provide the appearance of propriety, should anyone ever dig for details. The police department(s) never brought charges, and as far as they were concerned, the case was closed. Meanwhile, I’m thinking that back in the ivory tower (perhaps meaning the Lasch Building, or perhaps Old Main), furtive deals were being cut with Jerry, essentially that the university had swung its weight to keep the thing under wraps, so Jerry owed them big time, and only his resignation would do. To soften the blow, Sandusky would get a key to the Lasch Building and office space there. (I doubt that anyone specifically mentioned use of the showers, but he also had free access to those.)

When Mike McQueary witnessed a sex act taking place between Sandusky and a young boy in the shower, it was over two years later and Sandusky was enjoying his new arrangement. McQueary was taken aback by the scene before him — who wouldn’t be? — which he recounted to his father that evening and Joe Paterno the next morning. McQueary was a 28 year-old graduate assistant at the time who would later become an assistant coach on Paterno’s staff. As a GA in the football program, he was assigned to Paterno, so reporting the unholy event to the old man was McQueary’s only responsibility. Whatever happened from there on was not his concern. I think that unless there is evidence that McQuery lied about something or tried to suppress information, he should be completely absolved of any lingering burden from the Sandusky affair. He was the messenger, and as far as I know, he did his job well.

What happened from there is where the university political games start creeping into the picture. Paterno claims to have immediately reported the incident to his “boss”, athletic director Tim Curley. McQueary then heard from Curley ten days later when Curley asked him to come to the ivory tower to recount what he saw. While he presumably told Curley the same story he told Paterno and, later, the grand jury investigating the Sandusky affair, somehow the story changed when Curley was asked about it later by the same grand jury. What had been a sexual molestation turned into “horsing around,” which Curley thought was minor; therefore, he didn’t involve the police or child protective agencies.

Today the university barred Sandusky from its main campus. Meanwhile, Sandusky had been arrested yesterday and bonded out with $100,000.

Did McQueary lie to Curley? I doubt it. I think that the mind of a GA trying to work his way into a permanent, full-time job works quite differently from that of a full-time university administrator. While they’re both out to save their own asses, the procedure for doing that differs. The GA knows that dishonesty will probably blow his opportunity, whereas the administrator realizes that if a far reaching scandal were to happen, his ass would be compromised, as it had occurred under his watch, in his athletic department, on university premises, between two non-employees, one a minor — and the worst part is that Curley was probably instrumental in cutting the 1999 deal (in my opinion) with Sandusky. That deal, as you recall, swept the 1999 incident under the proverbial rug and gave Sandusky the keys to the castle.

Or did Paterno lie to Curley? What would Joe have to gain by lying? Protection of an assistant who served Paterno for over 30 years? Paterno is smarter than to simply change a story involving an eyewitness to protect an old friend and colleague. I believe that Paterno probably told Jerry that he was going to have to throw him to the wolves, knowing that the mindset in the ivory tower was such that the approach that would be taken going forward would be the one that the administrators there thought would do the least harm to the university. Paterno was once AD himself, so he undoubtedly knows how they think up there. I believe that if Paterno gave a truthful account of what McQueary told him along with a good word for Sandusky (“Try to minimize the damage to Jerry. He’s been through a lot.”), Curley would do the “right thing” and try to sweep it under the rug as much as possible. Curley, sitting in the ivory tower, is probably arrogant and stupid enough to believe that he could accomplish that.

Curley knew that there had been closed police reports relating to the 1999 incident. That made this one all the more onerous. He and Schultz could have had a private meeting to strategize just how the 2002 incident could be hush-hushed and what preventive measures could be taken to give Sandusky a token wrist slap. The story that came out was that “horsing around” didn’t constitute a criminal offense, so with full knowledge that they were taking a major risk, they did not call the university police. They admonished Sandusky to not bring children inside the Lasch building anymore. Curley later admitted that he had no way to enforce that sanction. You would think that Curley would at least take Sandusky’s keys, ending the arrangement that facilitated Sandusky’s peccadilloes with boys on university property, even if it was just a case of a 58 year old man “horsing around” with a young lad in the shower, but he didn’t even do that!

I suppose I could speculate about what dirt Sandusky has on the administration that could be used as blackmail to suppress any reprisals for his actions, but I don’t want to get into wacko conspiracy theories. I’m already far enough out in left field.

[Read more…]

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Filed Under: Current Events, Penn State Football, Penn State Scandal Tagged With: child molesting, college football, Gary Schultz, Graham Spanier, Jerry Sandusky, Nittany Lions, Penn State, Penn State University, Tim Curley

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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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