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Statue will/will not be torn down this weekend

Posted on July 20, 2012 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Jeez. I thought it would be a peaceful Friday. Went out this morning  to try out a couple of kayaks. Wound up buying two. Had a nice lunch with AS. Came back home. Read the news. What? The statue is coming down? The statue isn’t coming down? People thinking they know what they’re talking about not knowing what they’re talking about? WTF?

Some are saying that the issue has already been voted on. Others say that only Erickson is involved, not the BOT. Erickson said that he knows nothing about no steenking statue comeen down.

Well, if I were Erickson, I would do two things. First, I would decide to take the statue down. The reason is simple: appease the NCAA. For if Penn State doesn’t jump through enough hoops before the beginning of the football season, the NCAA is liable to ensure that there will be no football season. Second, I would swear everyone to secrecy. It seems that secrecy is an ambiguously implemented concept on the Penn State campus. A child rapist can be kept secret for 16 years, but at other times the ivory tower seems to leak like a sieve. This is one instance in which a leak to the ever hungry media could be  dangerous.

If the statue does come down this weekend as the leaks suggest, you can be sure there will be an organized protest. That’s a good enough reason for secrecy. Hell, we students used to guard the Nittany Lion shrine all night to protect against marauding Orangemen from Syracuse. I think we should expect that if the approximate timing — or even the date — of the statue removal is known, there will be a contingent of students to conduct an “over my dead body” vigil on the statue site. It could get ugly.

The argument in favor of removing the statue is that it will be a show of earnest intent by the sitting administration to absolve itself of the sins of the past. Coupled with the resignation of former trustee Steve Garban, the gesture might be enough to avoid the so-called death penalty. Or not. But Penn State has to make some visible progress beyond the sordid past of the Sandusky scandal.

Garban was chairman when the Sandusky scandal broke, so his resignation is a logical step. He still holds the title of Senior Vice President of Finance and Operations/Treasurer Emeritus at Penn State. His term would have ended in 2013. Garban was captain of the Nittany Lions football team in 1959 and worked for the university for 33 years. He was senior vice president for 12 of those and he was elected trustee in 1998. Many thought that he and Paterno were good friends.

Back to the statue, to leave it stand is to send a message of defiance to the NCAA. That’s perhaps the last thing Penn State needs to do right now. While this Turkey had recently advocated keeping the statue and moving it to a proposed Paterno exhibit in the All Sports Museum, it occurred to me that the NCAA might be specifically looking for this kind of symbolic “sacrifice” to appease the gods on high.

Will a Garban sacrifice and a posthumous Paterno defilement, along with implementation of the recommendations of the Freeh report, be sufficient as a show of good faith for the NCAA? This Turkey thinks that with a little more housecleaning on the board of trustees, it just might be.

Somebody needs to caulk up Old Main to plug those damn pesky leaks. The statue take down needs to happen under a cloak of secrecy to avoid a riot similar to that which occurred after Paterno’s dismissal last November. Students really don’t need much of an excuse to riot, but the statue removal would be a definite trigger.

Still, Penn State can’t allow itself to be held hostage by the threat of a student revolt, so it must act as Rod Erickson decides, and not change course in mid-stream.

Decisive leadership is essential at this juncture.

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Filed Under: Higher Education, Penn State Football, Penn State Scandal Tagged With: board of trustees, death penalty, Jerry Sandusky, NCAA, Paterno statue, Penn State, Steve Garban

Joe’s Statue Must Remain, But…

Posted on July 17, 2012 Written by The Nittany Turkey

We all have been bombarded with pros and cons relating to the removal of the Joe Paterno statue outside the stadium he effectively more than doubled in size through his 60+ year tenure. They come from blogs, the sports press, the guy sitting at the next bar stool, and from your mom when she calls to speak her piece on the matter.

Mark Coomes believes that the statue should remain and so do I.

“… big-time football has no business on college campuses.” —George Will

That Joe was the emperor of the football program at Penn State for at least 40 of those years is not something that anyone in his right mind can contest. Hell, he served as head football coach for 36% of the time Penn State has competed in intercollegiate football, which began in 1887!

Respected Athletic Director Ernie McCoy hired Paterno, then assistant coach, as head coach earning $20,000 per year to succeed Rip Engle in 1966. Paterno worked for McCoy until 1970, when he retired. Joe credited McCoy as “the guy who turned this whole athletic program around.”

Another key retirement in 1970 was President Eric A. “Prexy” Walker. An Englishman by birth and a Harvard electrical engineer by trade, he also held an MBA and a PhD from Harvard. He was a stern administrator who believed firmly in the Penn State culture of the time, that the institution would not graduate illiterate engineers. He lived on campus, in a house that is now part of the Hintz Alumni Center. Behind the house was a pond where in the aftermath of the great 1964 27-0 superdominant victory over Ohio State in Columbus, some “exuberant” students conducted an empirical test of the conjecture that the Volkswagen beetle of that era was so airtight it would float — and this one did. Walker had taken the job in 1956, when Milton S. Eisenhower, brother of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, retired.

Walker was in charge of the university as a whole. He was responsible for the creation of the Milton S. Hershey Medical Center. He was also in charge of McCoy, who was, in turn, in charge of Paterno. The lines of the functional organization were clearly defined in theory and in practice. If they would have remained that way after both Walker and McCoy retired in 1970, one could argue that Paterno would not have had the wherewithal to exceed the presumed authority of a football coach. But let’s drag ourselves back to reality.

Abetted by success on the football field, Joe Paterno began a successful, systematic consolidation of power. Having been named AFCA Coach of the Year in 1968, he was quite the desirable commodity in both college and pro football. The Steelers hired Chuck Noll after Paterno turned them down in 1969. The New York Giants offered Paterno the head coaching job several times in the 1970s and 1980s. The University of Michigan contacted Paterno for its head coaching vacancy that would eventually be filled by Bo Schembechler. Finally, Joe wrestled with a 1972 offer by the New England Patriots. He accepted it, but three weeks later reneged on his commitment. From that moment on, Joe was the Anointed One at Penn State.

Joe served a stint as both Athletic Director and Head Football Coach, and was succeeded by his friend, publicist Jim Tarman, who along with Paterno was impetus for the successful marketing of the program. Penn State was transformed from an eastern independent power to a fledgling Big Ten institution during Tarman’s tenure as AD.

The team also grabbed two national championships during the 1980s and was widely respected as a powerhouse, with Joe Paterno’s image inextricably associated with Penn State University. The first two years in the Big Ten were a continuation of the successes of the 1980s. The Rose Bowl team of 1994 was looked upon as one of the best offensive teams ever to walk onto a college football field. Indeed, were it not for Nebraska’s victory in the 1995 Orange Bowl, Penn State would have captured another national championship for that undefeated campaign. But from there, things went downhill.

Fast forward to 2011. Joe’s reputation had suffered over a decade and a half of largely mediocre, forgettable teams. Recruiting was suffering, and although “The Dark Years” had presumably passed by 2011, Penn State had settled into a role as a Big Ten mid-pack player. However, Paterno had maintained his ever strengthening iron grip on the program, even in the presence of declining teams and declining health. He was a stubborn old guy, yes, but he was an indelible presence during six decades. He cannot be erased.

Now, the Freeh Report has been issued, and it implicated Paterno in the University’s failures associated with enabling the sexual predator Jerry Sandusky to perpetrate his crimes on the Penn State campus. You all know the story by now. That brings us to the statue issue.

When his (should I capitalize the “H”?) statue was erected he publicly declared his opposition to it, but we never knew when to believe Joe’s humble veneer or view it as merely his public persona. Nevertheless it was erected — not a great idea for any currently tenured head coach, if at all, for precisely the reasons that it is being presently considered for demolition. Most of those calling for its demise fit into two categories: 1) Penn State haters who are happy to know that PSU’s arrogantly projected “Success with Honor” dictum was phony , and 2) self-righteous moralists who actually think getting rid of Paterno’s image will erase the whole sordid Sandusky affair from everyone’s memory.

Just today, the bronze effigy has been aerially threatened by a banner towed by a small airplane. It read “TAKE THE STATUE DOWN OR WE WILL.” Just who the hell “we” are is presently unknown. I would imagine that aerial sign companies in the Central Pennsylvania area will be grilled about it. This malicious threat comes in the wake of the BoT issuing its statement to the effect that any decisions about the statue would be delayed indefinitely.

Yesterday, student leaders removed Paterno’s name from their game week tent encampment, which was formerly called Paternoville. It will henceforth be named Nittanyville. Also, Nike removed Paterno’s name from its child care building in Beaverton, OR, and Brown University, Joe’s alma mater, renamed a scholarship formerly named for the late coach. Thus, the Depaternoization cleansing program (called Paternowashing by CBS Sports) continues apace.

That fits well into our present cowardly culture, in which we’re in constant denial of societal problems. We can no longer confront issues head on without fear of offending someone. If we confront feelings about homosexuality, we’re automatically branded as “homophobes” (a made up word); if we confront racial issues, we’re automatically racists (why aren’t we negrophobes or blancophobes? — oh yeah, I guess it’s a bad connotation to fear other races); and, in general, we try our damnedest to shield ourselves and our children from unpleasant revelations about the darker side of human nature (no racial pun intended). But the Sandusky crimes can never be swept under a rug, lest it happen again.

Neither can Paterno. Erasing his presence from the campus and the world will only serve to enhance his legendary status, given enough time. Time heals all wounds. Muhammad Ali, formerly Cassius Clay, was vilified for his outspoken nature, his draft dodging, and the myth of tossing his Olympic medal off a bridge in Louisville. Yeah, he had a big mouth. Many people considered him a criminal. However, now, in his old age, he is regarded as an elder statesman of sports and revered by society. It always seems to work that way. Even O.J. Simpson, currently in jail, possibly for a lesser crime than the capital felony many believe he perpetrated, has records that remain indelibly inscribed in record books.

Paterno deserves a spot in the annals of the history of Penn State. We need to get out of this denial thing and confront the differences, mistakes, and personal foibles that make us human. Joe Paterno was a human being, albeit a powerful one, but he was not a god, and was flawed as are all human beings. Furthermore, his track record of accomplishments will not be erased. It is doubtful whether the record book will ever even have an asterisk to satisfy the whiners who think the records should go away — swept under the rug with the rest of the unseemly Sandusky affair.

Let us recognize that Joseph Vincent Paterno was neither all good nor all bad. If the Freeh Report was correct, he made some very serious mistakes. However, he also won two national championships, produced a helluva lot of good men, and generously donated his personal money to the University, particularly the library. We need to recognize these successes, which accompanied by the assumption that he could do what he wanted, even with crimes occurring in his midst, make for a complete picture of a powerful figure who dominated the campus for over 40 years.

You whine, “it’s just football — football should not have such influence over academe,” to which I respond that it just happens to be the way it is, not just at Penn State, but also at just about every university with an NCAA Division I football team. Football stimulates alumni to contribute funds, making it an inextricable part of those schools. So, once again, confront the reality of today’s big universities. Don’t hang that whole thing on Joe.

Where money and power are involved, corruption will exist. It can take many forms, recruiting violations, payments to so-called student athletes, inordinate influence by boosters, etc. Silence is an important and expected concept relating to the corrupt system. What happens in the university stays in the university. Breeches of omerta are discouraged with only slightly smaller disincentives than would be employed by the Mafia.

It’s all part of major universities, not just Penn State. This is not to exonerate Penn State or mitigate its egregious failures, but to describe a corrupt culture that needs to be outed. The statue needs to serve as an omnipresent reminder of how we (yes, we) have allowed the cart to be expected to draw the horse. Give me any university and a team of investigators; I’ll guarantee that I find plenty of transgressions, both ethical and legal.

Anyone who believes the fairy tale that Penn State — or any of its peers — is squeaky clean is in straight-on, head-up-the-ass denial. “Say it isn’t so, Joe!” I worked in one such institution for 13 years. You’ve read some of my allusions to offenses that were swept under the rug there. It was not uncommon there for a head coach to visit an instructor to “request” that a grade be changed to keep a player academically eligible. “Student” athletes, indeed!

On ABC’s “This Week”, conservative panelist George Will addressed the same point with respect to the Penn State scandal:

“We have grafted a multi-billion dollar entertainment industry onto higher education. It is inherently discordant with the mission of the university; it is inherently corrupting; and you’re going to get [here] and elsewhere different forms of corruption, but always forms of corruption because big-time football has no business on college campuses.”

Will this corrupt culture ever be changed? That appears to be about as likely as the United States’ national politics to be transmogrified out of its two-party dynamic. However, any chances of permanently fixing the problem will completely evaporate if we succeed in burying its unpleasant taste under gallons of politically correct molasses.

So, I will once again propose that the statue should not be removed, but that it should be moved to a new “Joe Paterno Era” room in the All Sports Museum that will commemorate Paterno’s successes as well as his failures. While some will object, perhaps proposing an empty elevator shaft or a septic tank, the purpose of remembering and avoiding a repetition of the sins of the past will be well served into the future, by memorializing the good and bad of Joe’s larger than life 60+ year presence on the Penn State campus. The story needs to be told to future generations.

 

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Filed Under: Higher Education, Penn State Football, Penn State Scandal Tagged With: Joe Paterno, Paterno statue, Penn State, Sandusky, statue, university corruption

Report Details PSU Cover-Up and Neglect

Posted on July 13, 2012 Written by The Nittany Turkey

“Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Great men are almost always bad men.” —Lord Acton

With the Freeh report complete, it is time to take stock of what it revealed, where it leaves us, and where do we go from here. This post will provide this Turkey’s take on the whole sordid mess. It will be long, but I hope not too boring. It is best read slowly, with a glass of your favorite libation, which is how I’m writing it.

“The Joe Paterno we thought we knew is not the Joe Paterno who participated in — or directed — the cover-up.” —TNT

I’ll start with my feelings about the whole thing. I believe that a horrible series of criminal events were perpetrated by Jerry Sandusky, and many of them were enabled by the inaction of his immediate superior, the late Joe Paterno, along with highly placed University officials, particularly President Graham Spanier, Senior Vice President-Finance and Business Gary Schultz, and Athletic Director Tim Curley over a 16 year period. This will taint everyone’s image of the university for a long time, as well it should. ????? ??? ?????

Freeh’s report concluded that the desire to avoid bad publicity caused top officials at Penn State to engage in a cover-up of Sandusky’s criminal activities. Further, these same officials not only allowed Sandusky to have access to University facilities even after they were aware of his wrongdoings, but also they gave him a fat lump sum retirement payout and emeritus status. By allowing a monster to exist in their midst with impunity and comfort, they became de facto accessories to his crimes.

The Penn State Board of Trustees was never apprised of the ongoing investigations, and after several inquiries, they were given lame excuses by Spanier as to why he couldn’t answer their questions. This is obnoxiously arrogant behavior, to say the least.

The Joe Paterno we thought we knew is not the Joe Paterno who participated in — or directed — the cover-up. He knew about the 1998 investigation, yet he lied about having that knowledge. He convinced the top administrators to not go outside the University to report the 2001 incident. Beyond that, it was made quite clear in the report that Paterno wielded power beyond that of a mere football head coach, even a head coach of a high profile Big Ten program. He was a force to be reckoned with, and even the University president deferred to him. He knew exactly what was going on, and did nothing to stop it, resulting in additional rapes and endangerment of countless children.

Before his death in January 2012, Paterno told us that with the benefit of hindsight, he wished he had done more. Bullshit! Utter and complete bullshit. It is clear that Paterno’s willful intent was to sweep the entire matter under the rug and afford Sandusky a graceful and lucrative exit — with facility and shower privileges. Detestable!

Penn State released a atatement in reaction to the report, and the board of trustees is meeting today. There will certainly be much discussion of the findings. Although it would be good to see a few trustees resign because of their failure to press the matter further, I doubt that this will happen. On the other hand, Spanier is still tenured and is on administrative leave. The matter of his continued service must be addressed by the board today. His employment should be terminated without benefits. After all, what kind of benefits did Sandusky’s victims get?

One friend of the football program, Nike, has removed Paterno’s name from its child care center. Recall that Nike’s CEO was one of Paterno’s biggest supporters in the early days of this unfolding nightmare. Nike severing ties is a portent of things to come from other sources.

In addition to findings of fault, the Freeh Report gave the University a series of recommendations for improvements in policies and procedures that would reduce the endangerment of children and would enable compliance with established reporting laws. The University responded to the report here.

Should Paterno’s statue come down?

After considerable thought, I have come to the conclusion that the statue should remain, but it should be moved to a less conspicuous place. Reader jd asserted that there are statues of Confederate heroes in a veritable plethora of southern U.S. towns and cities whose honorees represented slavery, yet they’ve been allowed to remain, perhaps as a reminder of our sordid past. Similarly, the Holocaust Museum exists so that we don’t forget the evil of which mankind is capable. I will not compare serial child sexual molestation with slave holding or genocide. That is not my point. Instead, I say that instead of living in denial that something happened here, we should memorialize it (not lionize it) for future generations to understand that good men can do bad things if allowed to accumulate too much power.

I propose that a Paterno Room be created in the All-Sports Museum, where the statue can be a centerpiece in a tableaux of Joe’s achievements as well as his egregious failures. The failures should not be minimized, but should be at the forefront for all to see — such that it can never happen again. However, Paterno’s successes are to be applauded, in spite of his criminal negligence. You can’t just erase Paterno from Penn State history, like Khrushchev did with Stalin. The 60-year gap would be a ludicrous omission.

Joe set NCAA Division I records that will not go away. He led the Penn State football program out of the cow pastures and into the big time. He molded successful men and he gave back a lot of money to benefit the University. These achievements need to be preserved along with the obvious egregious failure.

Warren G. Harding is still acknowledged as a President of the United States, as is Richard Nixon. They both had their scandals, but they had their successes, too. We need to know as much about the former as we do the latter, and vice versa. History should be neither sanitized nor embellished.

Thus, I say keep Paterno’s memory alive, for better or for worse. The “healing process” will not be aided by denial.

Great men are almost always bad men.

Should the NCAA “death penalty” be given?

Should Penn State be made to pay for its sins by shutting down its football program for a period of time? Arguments can be made on both sides of this. I happen to believe that the death penalty is not indicated here. This is not a situation by which the football team unfairly benefited. If anything, the stigma of a dishonored Joe Paterno, who is still a hero to most of the players on the team, punishes the team severely enough for a wrongdoing in which they did not participate.

NBC Sports’ Michael Ventre feels otherwise. He believes that “Now that it’s been found that Joe Paterno and Penn State covered up for Jerry Sandusky, the NCAA should kill PSU football.”

Unlike this Turkey, Ventre believes that the football team did benefit from Paterno’s activities in connection with the Sandusky cover-up.

“If the worst is true, then Paterno and other officials at Penn State covered up Sandusky’s crimes because they wanted to protect the sanctity of the football program and make sure it continued unfettered, winning games and raking in cash,” wrote Ventre.

Surely, unfettered raking in of cash was one of the objectives of the cover-up, but the fund raising that would have been jeopardized by exposure of the crimes would affect the entire university, not just the football program.

Meanwhile, Adam Jacobi, lead blogger for the Big Ten believes that there is no reason for the NCAA to impose the death penalty. “Not unless we’re willing to completely redefine not only the NCAA’s bylaws, but the entire scope of what the NCAA even oversees to begin with.”

Bob Williams, vice president of communications for the NCAA, issued the following statement:

 “Like everyone else, we are reviewing the final report for the first time today.  As President Emmert wrote in his November 17th letter to Penn State President Rodney Erickson and reiterated this week, the university has four key questions, concerning compliance with institutional control and ethics policies, to which it now needs to respond. Penn State’s response to the letter will inform our next steps, including whether or not to take further action. We expect Penn State’s continued cooperation in our examination of these issues.”

Penn State’s response is forthcoming, no doubt.

The rules are different here

I’ll once again mention what I’ve been saying all along in previous posts. A culture of secrecy exists in many, if not most universities, both public and private, in this country, in which potential sources of bad publicity are not allowed to escape the ivy covered walls, lest funding sources dry up. While Penn State is certainly an egregious example of what can occur when the ivory tower assumes the arrogant stance that it can make its own rules, even if they are in defiance of federal, state, and local laws, many, many other colleges and universities are guilty of similar, albeit much lesser offenses.

I don’t write this with the intent of in any way exonerating Penn State for its transgressions or even mitigating them. Instead, I believe that we need to closely examine how universities operate beneath the finely finished veneer they create for the public. ????? ???? ????? No one wants bad publicity; however, universities seem particularly paranoid about negative words getting out. Once its reputation is tarnished, depending on the severity of the blemish, funding can take a big, deep hit for a long, long time.

You don’t hear about the low profile issues. They don’t involve legendary head football coaches with 61 years of tenure, high profile, deplorable crimes against humanity such as child molestation, and long term cover-ups of repeated offenses. Thus, they don’t tend to attract the attention of ambitious investigative reporters. (Sara Ganim of the Centre Daily Times and later, the Harrisburg Patriot News won a Pulitzer Prize for her reporting of the Sandusky affair.) When the typical university scandal is uncovered—if it is uncovered—it makes Page 27 of the book review section in a single paragraph with no by-line.

This huge morass should send a warning shot over the bows of other institutions who sweep their dirt under the rug. Let’s hope so, anyway. Although the typical “little” offenses such as kiting of grant funds by principal investigators or unethical sexual relations between professors and students in a position to be rewarded or penalized by the professor seem minor compared to the Sandusky episode, in the aggregate, they’re abominable nonetheless.

Let’s end this culture of “What happens in the university stays in the university.” This ain’t Las Vegas.

What Freeh found

The report cites absence of responsible leadership from the board of trustees, President Graham Spanier, Senior Vice President-Finance and Business Gary Schultz, Athletic Director Tim Curley, and Head Football Coach Joe Paterno. Each of these administrators was in a position to have knowledge of Sandusky’s activities, and each would have been able to prevent Sandusky from continuing his predatory practices. Yet no one acted. They exhibited more concern for Sandusky than for his victims, who were not even an afterthought during the cover-up.

Curley and Schultz, represented by counsel due to the pending charges against them, asserted that they were “good people trying to do their best to make the right decisions.” This, of course, is utter and complete, unfettered, attorney filtered bullshit. They knew what their responsibilities were.

In his own defense Paterno said, “I didn’t know exactly how to handle it and I was afraid to do something that might jeopardize what the university procedure was. So I backed away and turned it over to some other people, people I thought would have a little more expertise than I did. It didn’t work out that way.” So, Joe tried to blame it on his employees Spanier, Schultz, and Curley. Handle it, boys!

Spanier, during his interview with the Freeh committee, said that he never heard a report from anyone that Sandusky was engaged in any sexual abuse of children. He also said that if he had known or suspected that Sandusky was abusing children, he would have been the first to intervene. More bullshit! Spanier demonstrated his weakness as the titular leader of the university throughout this mess. He and Curley were firmly under Paterno’s thumb, for one thing, but at any time, he could have taken charge, demanding answers and corrective action. That never happened.

Meanwhile, Spanier stonewalled the board of trustees when he was asked about the possibility that there was criminal wrongdoing. Giving excuses such as “it wouldn’t be proper to talk while a grand jury investigation is in progress” and similar childish deflections at other points along the way, Spanier repeatedly hid facts relating to Sandusky’s child abuse from the Board, from the public, and from the media.

The primary conclusion by the investigation was that the cover-up and the concomitant failure to protect child victims was perpetrated in order to avoid the consequences of bad publicity. Additional findings included (quoted verbatim):

  • A striking lack of empathy for child abuse victims by the most senior leaders of the University.
  • A failure by the Board to exercise its oversight functions in 1998 and 2001 by not having regular reporting procedures or committee structures in place to ensure disclosure to the Board of major risks to the University.
  • A failure by the Board to make reasonable inquiry in 2011 by not demanding details from Spanier and the General Counsel about the nature and direction of the grand jury investigation and the University’s response to the investigation.
  • A President who discouraged discussion and dissent.
  • A lack of awareness of child abuse issues, the Clery Act, and whistleblower policies and protections.
  • A decision by Spanier, Schultz, Paterno, and Curley to allow Sandusky to retire in 1999, not as a suspected child predator, but as a valued member of the Penn State football legacy, with future “visibility” at Penn State and ways “to continue to work with young people through Penn State,” essentially granting him license to bring boys to campus facilities for “grooming” as targets for his assaults. Sandusky retained unlimited access to University facilities until November 2011.
  • A football program that did not fully participate in, or opted out, of some University programs, including Clery Act compliance. Like the rest of the University, the football program staff had not been trained in their Clery Act responsibilities and most had never heard of the Clery Act.
  • A culture of reverence for the football program that is ingrained at all levels of the campus community.

 The genesis of a cover-up, 1998

Prior to May 1998, several staff members and coaches recounted that seeing Sandusky showering with young boys was a regular occurrence, but none reported the behavior. When the shower incident of May 3, 1998 occurred, police and DPW responded and began an investigation. PSU officials including Spanier, Schultz, Curley, and Paterno were kept apprised of the investigation’s progress.

Schultz kept copious notes. His May 5, 1998 notes include the rhetorical question, “Is this the opening of Pandora’s box? Other children?” Allowing the investigation to run its course, Schultz emailed Spanier and Curley on June 9, 1998, stating, “I think the matter has been appropriately investigated and I hope it is now behind us.”

At that time, detectives interviewed Sandusky, advising him not to shower with any child. Sandusky said he wouldn’t. We know now that no charges were ever filed. We also know that no one in a position of authority at the university did another damn thing about Sandusky. Spanier, Schultz, Curley, and Paterno did not even talk with him about it, let alone taking any action to prevent recurrence of the shower episode. Furthermore, Spanier and Schultz did not report the investigation to the Board of Trustees.

And so the culture of secrecy exhibited by the behavior of these senior leaders can be held directly responsible for the assaults against young boys that took place through the years subsequent to the conclusion of the 1998 investigation.

Other assaults had occurred from 1995 through 1998. ????? ???? Those were obviously just the beginning.

Since the prosecutor assigned to the case and whose office decided not to prosecute Sandusky declined to be interviewed, many of the nuances behind the decision not to prosecute might never be released to the public.

Sandusky’s retirement

Many of us have speculated about the “unusual” timing of Jerry Sandusky’s retirement, finding it difficult to justify the sudden departure of a successful defensive coordinator without something having happened behind the scenes. Naturally, some of us would like to associate it with Sandusky’s nefarious activities and perhaps with a desire by the University to shove Sandusky aside. However, Freeh could find no evidence to support this conjecture.

Instead, it finds that Sandusky was distraught after finding that Paterno had decided that he was not going to be selected to be his successor as head coach. More Paterno chutzpah! Paterno told Sandusky that he was too deeply involved with Second Mile to be head coach, to which he would have to devote full time. He could not have his cake and eat it, too. 

So, Curley discussed the possibility of a step upstairs to the role of assistant athletic director, which Sandusky didn’t want.

Instead, he wanted his pension plus an additional annual amount, along with continued involvement with the university to run youth football camps and other programs involving young people. Spanier approved a one-time lump sum payment of $168,000, which was unprecedented at Penn State. While the retirement agreement was being worked out, Curley got approval to re-employ Sandusky for the 1999 season.

Sandusky was awarded “emeritus” rank along with special privileges including access to the locker room complex. Emeritus rank is typically awarded to a full professor with long tenure and significant contributions to the university upon retirement. It is a lifetime appointment that retains faculty privileges without associated responsibilities, other than to observe appropriate codes of ethics and conduct. Sandusky was of a low faculty rank that is not typically awarded emeritus status and indeed, did not meet Penn State’s requirements for the honor. Yet Spanier had promised it to Sandusky, and it was eventually awarded over the objections of the Provost and other University administrators.

In the end, Freeh found no connection between Sandusky’s retirement and the police investigation in 1998.

It still seems miiiiiiighty fishy to this Turkey, though. With all those special privileges and the huge lump sum payment, you’d think it was Sandusky who saw Spanier engaging in unlawful sexual acts.

Joe flip-flopped on McQueary

When Mike McQueary reported the 2001 shower incident, he called Paterno on a Saturday morning to tell him he needed to come to see the head coach to discuss something very important. McQueary recalled that Paterno said he did not have a job for McQueary, so “if that’s what it’s about, don’t bother coming over.” Interesting, ain’t it? McQueary wound up getting that job after all. Who knew?

I believe that we’ve all been through the McQueary story many times, so I won’t be going through all the “horsing around” stuff here.

 

If I make this thing any longer, I’ll drive people away in droves. AS has returned and she and I want to go out to look at tandem kayaks this afternoon, with the intent of purchasing one soon.

I sincerely appreciate all comments: pro, con, or otherwise.

 

 

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Filed Under: Higher Education, Penn State Football, Penn State Scandal Tagged With: board of trustees, death penalty, Freeh Report, Graham Spanier, Jerry Sandusky, Joe Paterno, Louis Freeh, Mike McQueary, Paterno statue, Penn State

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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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