May 22, 2013

Penn State Scandal: Jerry Sandusky speaks of Joe Paterno, Mike McQueary in interview

8d7aab1633d1171d9dc83c35ea16f5e1 Penn State Scandal: Jerry Sandusky speaks of Joe Paterno, Mike McQueary in interview

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) — STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) — Nine months after being convicted of sexually abusing 10 boys – a scandal that destroyed the once unimpeachable reputation of Hall of Fame is again claiming he did nothing wrong.

Sandusky has rarely spoken about the , although he has consistently maintained his innocence since his November 2011 arrest. The latest statements came Monday in portions of a taped interview aired on NBC’s “Today” and transcripts posted on the web site of a filmmaker who aims to clear Paterno’s name.

In the interviews, the former Penn State denied having inappropriate contact with the boys, although he acknowledged he may have “tested boundaries.”

“Yeah, I hugged them,” Sandusky said, according to transcripts posted on the filmmaker’s site. “Maybe I tested boundaries. Maybe I shouldn’t have showered with them. Yeah, I tickled them.

“I looked at them as being probably younger than even some of them were. But I didn’t do any of these horrible acts and abuse these young people. I didn’t violate them. I didn’t harm them.”

Although Sandusky’s comments aired and posted Monday were given to a man endeavoring to clear Paterno’s name, the late coach’s family has distanced themselves from the statements.

Wick Sollers, a Paterno , said in a statement that Sandusky’s statements are “transparently self-serving and yet another insult to the victims.”

“The Paterno family would prefer to remain silent on this matter, but they feel it is important to make it clear that they had no role in obtaining or releasing this recording,” Sollers said. “Moreover, they believe that any attempt to use this recording as a defense of Joe Paterno is misguided and inappropriate.”

Sandusky told filmmaker he was not sure whether Paterno, who was fired after Sandusky’s arrest, would have let him keep coaching if he suspected Sandusky was a pedophile. Sandusky was investigated by for a separate shower incident in 1998, but remained one of Paterno’s top assistants through 1999.

“If he absolutely thought I was, I’d say no,” Sandusky said in the audio recording. “If he had a suspicion, I don’t know the answer to that.”

Not long after his arrest, Sandusky also denied wrongdoing in an interview on NBC’s “Rock Center.” In halting statements, he acknowledged showering with young boys and engaging in what he called “horseplay.”

On the eve of his sentencing in October, Sandusky told a Penn State radio state he was the victim of a “well-orchestrated effort” by his accusers, the media, Penn State, plaintiffs’ attorneys and others.

“I speak today with hope in my heart for a brighter day, not knowing if that day will come,” Sandusky said in October. “Many moments have been spent looking for a purpose. Maybe it will help others, some vulnerable children who might have been abused, might not be, as a result of the publicity.”

Ziegler said the interviews were conducted during three sessions, and told the AP on Monday that additional excerpts will be posted online over the coming days. The transcripts were posted by Ziegler on his site, www.framingpaterno.com.

He describes himself as an author, broadcaster, commentator and maker of films, including the 2009 movie “Media Malpractice: How Obama Got Elected and Palin Was Targeted.”

Along with the Sandusky interview material, Ziegler posted a piece about himself that anticipates critical media coverage of his background. As an example, he noted he has been “fired in radio lots of times for saying things which seem outrageous.”

Penn State, which funded an investigation by former that concluded Paterno and other top university officials covered up allegations against Sandusky in order to protect the school’s reputation, issued a statement that said Sandusky’s latest remarks “continue to open wounds for his victims, and the victims of everywhere.”

Attorneys for the boy whose assault was witnessed by McQueary said their client – identified as Victim 2 in court documents – “have heard enough from .”

The lawyers – Joel Feller, Matt Casey, Justine Andronici and Andrew Shubin – issued a statement Monday saying Victim 2 and their other clients are focusing on “healing and holding Penn State accountable for choosing to protect Jerry Sandusky and themselves instead of protecting children from years of horrific sexual abuse.”

Sandusky, 69, is serving a 30- to 60-year after being convicted last year of 45 counts of . He is pursuing appeals.

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 Penn State Scandal: Jerry Sandusky speaks of Joe Paterno, Mike McQueary in interview  Penn State Scandal: Jerry Sandusky speaks of Joe Paterno, Mike McQueary in interview  Penn State Scandal: Jerry Sandusky speaks of Joe Paterno, Mike McQueary in interview  Penn State Scandal: Jerry Sandusky speaks of Joe Paterno, Mike McQueary in interview  Penn State Scandal: Jerry Sandusky speaks of Joe Paterno, Mike McQueary in interview

 Penn State Scandal: Jerry Sandusky speaks of Joe Paterno, Mike McQueary in interview

Penn State Scandal: Nike co-founder Phil Knight blasts Freeh report

1b816b4806f49337598e6a86bb9da2db Penn State Scandal: Nike co founder Phil Knight blasts Freeh report
(Nike co-founder Phil Knight called the findings of the Freeh Report unjustified and unsubstantiated. Don Ryan/AP)

BEAVERTON, Ore. (AP) — Nike co-founder Phil Knight has issued a statement blasting the Freeh report’s characterization of Penn State in the scandal involving .

Following the release last year of Freeh’s report, Knight issued a statement saying he was saddened that Paterno apparently made missteps that led to “heartbreaking consequences.”

But Knight now says that he may have jumped to conclusions, after a new critique that was commissioned by the Paterno family and carried out by experts that included , a former U.S. attorney general and governor of Pennsylvania.

In a statement released Monday, Knight called the findings of the Freeh report unjustified and unsubstantiated. He also criticized the ’s subsequent sanctions on Penn State’s as unwarranted.

“When this tragic story first unfolded Joe cautioned all of us to slow down and carefully gather the facts before ,” Knight said in the statement. “We owed it to the victims, he said, to get to the truth. It was counsel we all should have followed.”

Sandusky, 69, is serving a 30- to 60-year prison term for the sexual abuse of 10 boys over a period of 15 years, including attacks on children inside facilities.

Paterno died in January 2012 at age 85. Knight spoke at Paterno’s memorial service, but after the Freeh report was released he took the name off the Joe Paterno at Nike headquarters in Beaverton.

The Freeh Paterno and other university officials covered up against Sandusky to spare the university . But the family’s review said the cover-up claims were inaccurate, were unfounded and equated to a “rush to injustice.”

Paterno’s family released the review of Freeh’s investigation on Sunday. The findings were posted on the website paterno.com.

“There’s simply nothing in this record, in the Freeh report, that indicates he (Paterno) was involved in any way,” Thornburgh told The Associated Press.

Freeh defended his report.

“I stand by our conclusion that four of the most powerful people at Penn State failed to protect against a child sexual predator harming children for over a decade,” he said in a statement issued Sunday through a spokesman.

The NCAA took unprecedented action in the wake of the Freeh report by quickly levying strict sanctions on Penn State’s football team, including a four-year bowl ban, strict scholarship cuts and a $ fine on the university. College sports’ governing body also vacated 111 wins under Paterno, erasing what had been his major college record of 409 career victories.

Knight took issue with the sanctions in his statement, which was first obtained by ESPN.com.

“The NCAA acted outside its charter and rendered judgment absent any kind of investigation or judicial hearing. It was simply grandstanding,” Knight said.

An NCAA spokeswoman said the organization stood by its previous statements and declined to comment Sunday.

Penn State Scandal: Nike co-founder Phil Knight blasts Freeh report is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Penn State Scandal: Nike co founder Phil Knight blasts Freeh report  Penn State Scandal: Nike co founder Phil Knight blasts Freeh report  Penn State Scandal: Nike co founder Phil Knight blasts Freeh report  Penn State Scandal: Nike co founder Phil Knight blasts Freeh report  Penn State Scandal: Nike co founder Phil Knight blasts Freeh report

 Penn State Scandal: Nike co founder Phil Knight blasts Freeh report

Penn State Scandal: Paterno supporters light 409 candles on anniversary of his death

dd7475dfa1a0f1383b6c9dd942a0765d Penn State Scandal: Paterno supporters light 409 candles on anniversary of his death
(Candles surround a mural containing a likeness of former , at a candlelight memorial on the first anniversary of his death in State College, Pa. Gene J. , AP)

(PhatzRadio / ) — STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — Despite a subzero windchill, about 400 Joe Paterno supporters gathered in front of a mural in downtown here to honor the man who commanded Penn State’s football sidelines for 46 years. Students, alumni and fans bundled in jackets, scarves and hats together, taking solace that the night had allowed them to celebrate Paterno’s life surrounded by fellow supporters.

On the one-year anniversary of the longtime football coach’s death, 409 lined Heister Street in front of Michael ’s Inspiration Mural. The number represents each of Paterno’s wins before 111 of his victories were vacated as part of the handed down by the in response to a report that alleged top school administrators could have prevented from sexually abusing young boys.

Paterno died in January 2011 of complications related to his at age 85.

Pilato spoke briefly about how appreciative he was of the crowd, saying, “We are all here as one big family to honor a .” Pilato said Paterno was looking down on Heister Street and would see the “409″ depicted on the Inspiration Mural.

Melinda Wright, one of the organizers of the and a friend of Pilato’s, said the idea for the event was formed in November because she hadn’t heard of anything organized to honor Paterno’s death. Wright, of Chester Springs, Pa., said the intent of the was to encourage those who were in mourning to come to the mural rather than Paterno’s , out of respect to his family.

Although she did not graduate from the university, Wright said that living in Pennsylvania her whole life forced her to be a fan of the Penn , as well as Paterno. She joked that on the day she was born, she was told two things: you need to vote and you need to support Penn State.

For Ryan Patten, a sophomore majoring in recreation, parks and tourism management, coming to Tuesday’s vigil was a way for him to heal existing wounds.

The lifelong State College resident said Paterno has been a big part of his life since he was born. In some ways, he said, Paterno created a connection within the Patten family. Patten’s brother, sister, father and mother attended the university during Paterno’s tenure. Patten said that for his whole life, Paterno posters hung on the walls of his bedroom and football season was the best time of the year.

So when the Jerry Sandusky case devastated the university, it hit close to home. Suddenly everything he believed to be true now needed to be questioned, Patten said. Sandusky was convicted of 45 counts of last June and will serve at least 30 years in prison.

“The scandal ripped a chunk of my childhood,” Patten said. “I think remembering [Paterno] will help me get it back.”

Penn State Scandal: Paterno supporters light 409 candles on anniversary of his death is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Penn State Scandal: Paterno supporters light 409 candles on anniversary of his death  Penn State Scandal: Paterno supporters light 409 candles on anniversary of his death  Penn State Scandal: Paterno supporters light 409 candles on anniversary of his death  Penn State Scandal: Paterno supporters light 409 candles on anniversary of his death  Penn State Scandal: Paterno supporters light 409 candles on anniversary of his death

 Penn State Scandal: Paterno supporters light 409 candles on anniversary of his death

Penn State Scandal: Governor to sue NCAA over Penn State sanctions

a54ca1be45755a7db0537b81d5403592 Penn State Scandal: Governor to sue NCAA over Penn State sanctions

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Gov. said Tuesday he plans to sue the in federal court over stiff sanctions imposed against in the wake of the scandal.

The Republican governor scheduled a Wednesday news conference on the Penn State campus in State College to announce the antitrust filing in U.S. District Court in Harrisburg.

The sanctions, which were agreed to by the university in July, included a $ fine that would be used nationally to finance child abuse prevention grants. The sanctions also included a four-year bowl for the university’s marquee , reduced and the forfeiture of 112 wins but didn’t include a suspension of the program, the so-called .

The governor’s office announced the news conference late Tuesday afternoon. His spokesman did not respond to repeated calls and emails seeking to confirm a Sports Illustrated story that cited anonymous sources saying a lawsuit was imminent.

Corbett’s brief statement did not indicate whether his office coordinated its with -elect Kathleen Kane, who is scheduled to be sworn in Jan. 15.

Kane, a Democrat, ran on a vow to investigate why it took nearly three years to charge Sandusky, an assistant under former Joe Paterno. Corbett was the attorney general when that office took over the case in early 2009 and until he became governor in January 2011.

State and from Pennsylvania have objected to using the Penn State fine to finance activities in other states. Penn State has already made the first $12 million payment, and an NCAA task force is deciding how it should be spent.

The NCAA, which did not respond to calls seeking comment Tuesday, has said at least a quarter of the money would be spent in Pennsylvania.

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 Penn State Scandal: Governor to sue NCAA over Penn State sanctions  Penn State Scandal: Governor to sue NCAA over Penn State sanctions  Penn State Scandal: Governor to sue NCAA over Penn State sanctions  Penn State Scandal: Governor to sue NCAA over Penn State sanctions  Penn State Scandal: Governor to sue NCAA over Penn State sanctions

 Penn State Scandal: Governor to sue NCAA over Penn State sanctions

Penn State Scandal: Franco Harris confronts NCAA president at speech in L.A.

d0f3e8cca799cc63bd2107670d8d36d3 Penn State Scandal: Franco Harris confronts NCAA president at speech in L.A.
Former Penn State running back has the microphone taken away as he tries to ask questions during a public question and before the on Sept. 14.(Photo: Gene J. , AP)

(PhatzRadio / ) —- was in Los Angeles Wednesday morning to give a speech on amateurism and academics in at the city’s Chamber of Commerce. If you’re familiar with recent events, you won’t be surprised to hear that former Penn State running back and were right on Emmert’s heels.

Harris has been one of the most of the the NCAA levied upon Penn State in the wake of the scandal – a $ fine, for starters, as well as a four-year postseason ban. Ziegler, who is working on a documentary about how the university treated former , was on hand to film the meeting.

Depending on who’s telling the story, the inevitable head-to-head between Emmert and Harris – and you knew it was coming – went one of two ways.

According to Ziegler, Harris “confronted” Emmert, police were called and Emmert “ran away.” Via his Twitter account, Ziegler writes:

“Just dropped Harris off at LAX after we confronted NCAA Pres about PSU sanctions. Police were called & Emmert ran away out back door.”

Cut and dry: Harris spoke, police were called, Emmert ran.

The NCAA is painting a slightly different picture of what occurred on Wednesday, however.

According to Bob Williams, the vice president of communications for the NCAA, Ziegler was told upon arriving at the Chamber of Commerce that he would not be able use his camera inside the event.

After concluding his speech, Emmert conducted a question-and- with the audience. Emmert called on Harris, who made a statement about Penn State and the NCAA’s penalties and asked for Emmert’s reaction.

“I guess we can agree to disagree,” Emmert replied, according to Williams.

While this back-and-forth was going on, said Williams, Ziegler pulled out his cell phone to record Emmert. A woman at the meeting told Ziegler to stop, since recording was not allowed at the event, but Ziegler refused.

“He wouldn’t stop,” Williams said, “and the police were called.” At the conclusion of the event, Emmert and Williams “walked out the same door we entered. The car was downstairs in the garage.”

If nothing else, the dual accounts of what occurred Wednesday serve as a reminder that there are two sides to every story. (It might also serve as a reminder that it’s very difficult to include every detail of a story in 140 characters or less.)

Afterwards, Ziegler and Harris held their own Q&A on the steps of the Chamber of Commerce. “I really wasn’t happy with his answer at all,” Harris says in the video. “He didn’t answer it, how he found Joe Paterno guilty when Jerry Sandusky, in those two time-frame instances, was found not guilty.”

Penn State Scandal: Franco Harris confronts NCAA president at speech in L.A. is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Penn State Scandal: Franco Harris confronts NCAA president at speech in L.A.  Penn State Scandal: Franco Harris confronts NCAA president at speech in L.A.  Penn State Scandal: Franco Harris confronts NCAA president at speech in L.A.  Penn State Scandal: Franco Harris confronts NCAA president at speech in L.A.  Penn State Scandal: Franco Harris confronts NCAA president at speech in L.A.

 Penn State Scandal: Franco Harris confronts NCAA president at speech in L.A.

Penn State Scandal: Sandusky seeks less harsh Pa. prison setting

c3f44795babf1cd23f93ebe112862461 Penn State Scandal: Sandusky seeks less harsh Pa. prison setting
Former Penn State assistant football Sandusky leaves the Centre after being sentenced in his case on Oct. 9 in Bellefonte, Penn.(Photo: , )

(PhatzRadio / AP) — HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — A lawyer for former Penn State assistant Jerry Sandusky said Friday his client has gotten his back after his child abuse conviction and sentencing and hopes will find a way to house him under less restrictive conditions than he currently experiences.

Karl said after spending several hours with Sandusky at Greene in on Friday that Sandusky’s outlook has improved since he was sentenced two months ago to decades behind bars. He said they discussed pending post-sentencing motions and plans for an appeal.

“I was meeting with a man who was again ready to press forward, who has regenerated his energies and has clearly devoted his time and energy to perfecting that appeal,” Rominger said. “His fight is 100 percent back.”

Rominger said Sandusky, 68, rates as a Level 2 inmate on a five-level security classification but is being kept under much more severe Level 5 conditions. He said Sandusky is alone in his cell for 23 hours a day during the week and around the clock on weekends.

Rominger said Sandusky has been allowed two phone calls a month, while other Level 5 prisoners get only one. Sandusky also has been issued a television, which Rominger said would not be the case for a typical Level 5 prisoner.

He said he planned to write to the prison’s warden.

“We’re not completely devoid of common sense,” Rominger said. “We understand the prison system is trying to balance their concerns about physical safety. We are just looking for middle ground.”

Sandusky, a former assistant to head football , was convicted in June of sexually abusing 10 boys, some on campus. He didn’t testify at his trial but has maintained his innocence. He’s serving a 30- to 60-year sentence.

The abuse scandal rocked Penn State, bringing down Paterno and the university’s then-president and leading ’ governing body, the NCAA, to levy unprecedented against the university’s . Criminal charges are pending against three former high-ranking university officials accused of helping to cover up abuse complaints, but they say they’re innocent.

Sandusky’s post-sentencing motions will be the subject of arguments before a judge Jan. 10 in Bellefonte, and Rominger said preparations would be much easier if Sandusky had more regular access to a phone.

Family members have visited Sandusky, but Friday was the first time he has met with his legal team at the prison.

“It’s a tough life, Level 5,” Rominger said. “And I know some people in the public will say, ‘Who cares?’ But the answer is, I thought we believe in equality in America. And while he’s a convicted sex offender in Pennsylvania, he would like to be treated like every other convicted sex offender.”

Sandusky believes he would be safe in the prison’s general population, Rominger said.

“He said to me he can understand where some of the concern comes from, but he’s not happy being stuck in a cell 23 hours a day,” Rominger said.

Greene , where most of Pennsylvania’s death row inmates are kept, contains 1,800 prisoners and employs a staff of 700.

Penn State Scandal: Sandusky seeks less harsh Pa. prison setting is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Penn State Scandal: Sandusky seeks less harsh Pa. prison setting  Penn State Scandal: Sandusky seeks less harsh Pa. prison setting  Penn State Scandal: Sandusky seeks less harsh Pa. prison setting  Penn State Scandal: Sandusky seeks less harsh Pa. prison setting  Penn State Scandal: Sandusky seeks less harsh Pa. prison setting

 Penn State Scandal: Sandusky seeks less harsh Pa. prison setting

Penn State Scandal: Penn State ex-President Spanier heads to court

d19a400cf07021ffd0c4c5488a5c2fdb Penn State Scandal: Penn State ex President Spanier heads to court
Former Penn State leaves the Centre County Courthouse after being sentenced in his case on October 9, 2012 in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania. The 68-year-old Sandusky was sentenced to at least 30 years and not more that 60 years in prison for his conviction in June on 45 counts of , including while he was the for the Penn State .
(October 8, 2012 – Source: / North America)

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — The criminal case begins against Graham Spanier, the former accused of lying during the child molestation case and trying to derail the investigation.

A district judge in suburban Harrisburg was scheduled to arraign Spanier and set bail on Wednesday, a proceeding that took less than 10 minutes last week for his two co-defendants.

Spanier, 64, was charged last week with perjury, obstruction, endangering the welfare of children, failure to properly report suspected abuse and conspiracy for his actions in response to complaints about Jerry Sandusky showering with children. Spanier denies the allegations and has claimed he is being framed for political purposes.

He served as Penn State’s president for 16 years but was forced out a year ago after Sandusky was charged along with two of Spanier’s top underlings. Spanier is on paid leave as a member of the faculty.

Along with the charges against Spanier, prosecutors added counts against and . They were arraigned Thursday. Curley, the athletic director on leave, and Schultz, the school’s retired vice president, await trial in January on charges of failure to report suspected abuse and perjury.

The new charges came almost exactly a year after details of the case against Sandusky sent a maelstrom through State College, toppling longtime Paterno and eventually leading to severe against the team.

Sandusky, 68, vigorously contested the charges but was convicted in June of 45 counts of abuse of boys, including violent sexual attacks inside campus facilities. He was sentenced last month to 30 to 60 years in prison.

A grand jury report alleged Spanier testified falsely that he did not know of a 1998 complaint against Sandusky, made by a mother and investigated by university police.

“Spanier was obviously kept in the loop on this matter as Schultz copied him in on emails that discussed the status and conclusion of the investigation,” the jury report said.

It also claimed Spanier lied, about a 2001 instance of abuse witnessed by a graduate assistant, when he testified that Curley and Schultz described it only as horseplay. Email traffic among the men, jurors wrote, “make clear they are discussing an event that involves the abuse of a child.”

Spanier’s obstruction charges involve “numerous lies” and hiding “pertinent files and notes,” alleged the grand jury report, known as a presentment.

The report described how he addressed the growing scandal last year with the board of trustees, and how he put out statements supportive of Curley and Schultz after their arrest. The jury report said investigators were immediately able to get important records from the university after Spanier was replaced as president.

“It should be noted that Spanier continues to mislead with numerous public statements that contain demonstrably false statements,” the jury claimed.

Spanier’s lawyers put out a written statement law week that accused Gov. Tom Corbett, who was attorney general when the investigation began, of orchestrating the charges to divert attention from questions about why it took three years to bring charges against Sandusky. They said there was no factual basis for the Spanier charges.

“Spanier has committed no crime and looks forward to the opportunity to clear his good name and well-earned national reputation for integrity,” his defense lawyers wrote. “This presentment is a politically motivated frame-up of an innocent man.”

Attorney General Linda Kelly said last week the three administrators had engaged in a “conspiracy of silence” to hide the truth.

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325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Penn State Scandal: Penn State ex President Spanier heads to court

Penn State Scandal: Emmert defends PSU’s sanctions / Sandusky moved from county jail to state prison

470e1d65251dbef1bb52c58e38c34119 Penn State Scandal: Emmert defends PSU’s sanctions / Sandusky moved from county jail to state prison

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) — says the sanctions levied on Penn State for the scandal dealt with the behavior of and whether or not the school handled the appropriately.

Emmert told The Associated Press in an interview Wednesday in Chicago that the “fact that there was criminal activity is not the ’s issue.”

The landmark penalties handed down by the NCAA in July included a four-year bowl ban and strict scholarship cuts.

A former , Sandusky was sentenced this month to at least 30 years in prison after being convicted on dozens of criminal counts. Authorities said allegations occurred on and off school property.

The NCAA had said before the sanctions it would look into at Penn State.

“I think it’s important to differentiate what the Penn was about and what it wasn’t about,” Emmert said. “What we were interested in, and what we focused on was the behavior of those people around that situation, and whether or not the university handled the allegations and the information that it received appropriately.”

He added the NCAA was interested “not in the crimes themselves, but in what happened after those crimes were committed and how they were dealt with or not dealt with.”

Many Penn State fans, alumni and former players have criticized the NCAA’s decision, along with the university’s acceptance of the penalties. But Rodney Erickson has said he wanted to avoid an even worse punishment — the so-called “,” or elimination of the program entirely.

The NCAA’s decision was based on a report by former director Louis Freeh for Penn State that said that late and three school officials concealed allegations against Sandusky in order to protect the school’s image. Paterno’s family and the official have vehemently denied those conclusions.

Emmert said if a university addresses criminal activity “rapidly, then that’s not an NCAA matter. It’s whether or not the university fails to respond, to treat a student or an employee in a way that’s fundamentally different than they might treat someone else in the same circumstance. That’s what constitutes a loss of .”

Sandusky moved from county jail to

CAMP HILL, Pa. (AP) — Jerry Sandusky became a state prison inmate Tuesday with his transfer out of the Centre County jail, his home since he was convicted in June of child molestation.

The 68-year-old former Penn State assistant coach arrived early in the morning at the State Correctional Institute at Camp Hill, just outside Harrisburg, a state prison system spokeswoman said.

He faces testing and evaluation that will take a week or more before he can be assigned a security risk level and sent to one of the state facilities as his “home” prison. At Camp Hill, experts will assess his mental state, physical health and education level, and determine whether he needs treatment.

“I have some concerns about his medical needs and we’re going to be taking a careful look at that to make sure they’re being addressed,” said his lawyer, Karl . Specifically, he said, Sandusky has sleep apnea and uses a so-called CPAP machine.

Sandusky was sentenced this month to 30 to 60 years for sexual abuse of 10 boys over a 15-year period. He has repeatedly asserted his innocence and last week filed post-sentencing motions, seeking to have convictions thrown out or a new trial.

Rominger said he was waiting to see how state prosecutors respond to the defense motions and how Judge John Cleland rules on them. If the judge rules against Sandusky, the defense will then have a month in which to appeal to Superior Court.

There are about 6,800 sex offenders serving time in Pennsylvania’s prison system. The Corrections Department does not maintain special units for sex offenders, and there is no way to predict where he will be sent.

Also Tuesday, a book by Aaron Fisher that recounts his abuse by Sandusky was published. “Silent No More” describes how Fisher’s claims first came to light at his school district a half-hour northeast of State College, triggering the investigation that produced charges nearly a year ago.

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325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Penn State Scandal: Emmert defends PSU’s sanctions / Sandusky moved from county jail to state prison

Penn Satet Scandal: Paterno’s FBI file reveals threats

966e7fbfa55a9dad9a9b84d7db6b5121 Penn Satet Scandal: Paterno’s FBI file reveals threats

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The kept a thick file on Joe Paterno, but it mostly involves threatening letters sent to him and his staff years ago, and there’s no mention of his former assistant , who was convicted this year of .

Paterno’s 868-page file shows he received a series of threatening letters sent in the late 1970s and early ’80s from someone who signed them A Bitter Father. The author blames Paterno for family problems that apparently surfaced after his son left the university’s heralded football program prematurely.

“I feel you are responsible for me loosing (sic) my son,” A Bitter Father writes. “He went to Penn State because of you in the first place. He feels he got a bum deal and I agree. He lost interest in everything and went from bad to worse.”

Another , to an , suggests Paterno was responsible for the assistant’s “tragic accident.” The file doesn’t say what the accident was.

The FBI posted the late coach’s file online Wednesday in response to Freedom of Information Act requests from media outlets. The Washington Times first reported on the contents, which also had been mailed to media outlets a day earlier.

Paterno died in January at age 85, two months after losing his job over the Sandusky sexual-abuse scandal.

An FBI memo dated Dec. 16, 1977, said Paterno found the letters troubling.

The FBI withheld 44 pages of Paterno’s file, citing privacy issues and the protection of a confidential source.

The FBI spent several years investigating the written threats sent to Paterno, his staff and even a Penn State television commentator, following leads that took agents to a and a shipbuilding company in the Pittsburgh area. The leads apparently went nowhere.

Additionally, Penn State Dick Harter received a threatening letter in 1980, the file shows.

A Bitter Father later apologized to Paterno, saying he had spoken to his priest and realized he shouldn’t blame others for his troubles. But the letters seem to have continued.

Sandusky, Paterno’s longtime , was convicted in June of sexually abusing 10 boys, some on campus. He awaits sentencing and maintains he’s innocent.

Former FBI led a recent Penn State internal investigation into the Sandusky matter, faulting Paterno and other for putting the university’s reputation and football program over the safety of children.

Paterno’s family strongly denied he protected Sandusky for fear of .

Penn Satet Scandal: Paterno’s FBI file reveals threats is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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Penn State Scandal: Penn State faculty group disputes NCAA sanctions

8485fc8fe9f7fa0a2e11a88b9cb7386c Penn State Scandal: Penn State faculty group disputes NCAA sanctions

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Former Penn State faculty leaders blasted the NCAA and Freeh on Tuesday over their handling of the child sex-abuse scandal, saying Freeh’s report – prepared for the university – and the NCAA’s $ in fines unfairly punish the entire university community.

The scholars said Freeh used “scant evidence” to support conclusions that the NCAA then relied upon and “embellishe(d)” to set that harmed not just the athletic department but Penn State’s academics well-being and financial health.

“On a foundation of scant evidence, the report adds layers of conjecture and supposition to create a portrait of fault, complicity, and malfeasance that could well be at odds with the truth,” said the statement, signed by 29 past chairs of the faculty senate.

Freeh defended his work Tuesday in an interview with The Associated Press. Addressing specific criticism that his team did not interview and other key witnesses, Freeh said his team respected requests by to rely on their . McQueary is the who saw Sandusky, a former , in the shower with a boy in 2001.

“We did not interview him; that was at the request of the attorney general,” Freeh said. “Some of the people we normally would have interviewed, we were asked by the prosecutors not to do so.”

“We stand very strongly behind our report,” Freeh said.

His 267-page report concluded that failures of leadership, an intense football culture and an unbending desire to protect the university’s reputation all served to enable Sandusky as he molested young boys for years. Sandusky, a longtime , was convicted in June of abusing 10 boys, some in the locker room showers.

Freeh’s findings have come under fire from ousted Graham Spanier, the family of late football and the two university officials charged with perjury and failing to report the abuse complaints.

The also include a four-year ban on bowl games.

The faculty leaders took special issue with the NCAA, saying it jumped to conclusions in finding the school had a long history of putting football over academics. The former teachers said they had hundreds of years of collective experience at Penn State and had never been asked to change grades for athletes or approve of phantom courses or majors.

“Not only are these assertions about the Penn State culture unproven, but we declare them to be false,” the statement said. The signers include former engineering professors Richard G. Cunningham, who led the faculty senate in 1967-68, and Jean Landa Pytel, who led the group in 2010-2011.

The NCAA did not immediately return a call for comment.

Neither Paterno nor Spanier were charged in the case, although both lost their jobs. Paterno died of lung cancer in January.

Sandusky is awaiting sentencing. Former school vice president Gary Schultz and former athletic director Tim Curley are awaiting trial on the perjury and failure to report charges. They have pleaded not guilty.

“The shock of the crimes that occurred here clearly underlines the need for greater vigilance and stronger policies. However, the sweeping and unsupported generalizations by the Freeh Group … and the NCAA do not provide a satisfactory basis for productive change,” the faculty group wrote.

Penn State Scandal: Penn State faculty group disputes NCAA sanctions is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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