May 19, 2013

Penn State Scandal: Sandusky asks judge to overturn abuse convictions

c88c61b74cb44c7a1768c1f5f7da07e9 Penn State Scandal: Sandusky asks judge to overturn abuse convictions
Former Penn State leaves the Centre County Courthouse after being sentenced in his child sex abuse 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 defensive coordinator for the Penn State college team.
(October 8, 2012 – Source: Patrick Smith/ North America)

BELLEFONTE, Pa. (AP) — Former Penn State assistant football Sandusky asked a judge on Thursday to overturn his convictions and grant him a new trial, claiming his lawyers lacked sufficient time to prepare and the for some charges had expired.

Sandusky’s lawyers made the filing at the courthouse in Bellefonte where he was sentenced two weeks ago to 30 to 60 years in prison after being convicted of abusing 10 boys, some on Penn State’s campus in State College.

“The defendant submits the court’s sentence was excessive and tantamount … to a , which the defendant submits is in violation of his rights,” they wrote.

The 31-page set of motions, technically not appeals because they were filed with the trial judge, cover a wide range of assertions, including , improper use of and erroneous rulings from the bench.

More than a third of the document explores ways Sandusky believes the rapid pace of the case violated his right to due process of law, as he went from arrest to trial in just over seven months. His lawyers said they were swamped by documents from prosecutors, they lacked time to interview possible witnesses and an expert and two assistants were not available at trial.

The document said Judge ruled improperly concerning the use of a computer-generated drawing of an accuser and issued incorrect jury instructions. It also raised issues about prosecutors’ , the vagueness of the charges, the sequestration of jurors and the amount of restitution ordered.

A spokesman for the attorney general’s office said the Sandusky filing was under review.

Sandusky remains in the , awaiting a transfer to a . Eight young men testified against him in June, describing a range of abuse they said included fondling and oral and anal sex when they were boys.

Sandusky didn’t testify at his trial but has consistently maintained his innocence in interviews and at sentencing.

Also Thursday, People magazine said an accuser identified in court papers as Victim 1, whose claims of being abused by Sandusky began the investigation in late 2008 and who testified against him at trial, gave an interview in which he spoke out publicly by name for the first time.

Aaron Fisher, 18, told the magazine he decided to come forward with a book to tell other victims it is better to tell people about abuse than remain silent. Fisher, who’s expected to appear on ABC on Friday, said he and Sandusky’s other victims “had a very long battle to see justice done.”

Sandusky, 68, built a reputation as one of the country’s premier defensive coaches while serving under head coach Joe Paterno, including two national championships. That image was shattered last year by his arrest.

The abuse scandal rocked Penn State, bringing down Paterno and the university’s president and leading the NCAA, college sports’ governing body, to levy unprecedented sanctions against the university’s football program.

Two Penn State administrators were charged as a result of the investigation into the Sandusky allegations, accused of lying to the grand jury that investigated Sandusky and not reporting suspected child abuse to the proper authorities. Those two officials, athletic director Tim Curley, who is on administrative leave, and retired vice president Gary Schultz, await trial in January and maintain their innocence.

Former FBI Director Louis Freeh, hired by university trustees to conduct an investigation into the university’s handling of abuse complaints against Sandusky, concluded that Paterno, who died in January, ousted president Graham Spanier, Curley and Schultz concealed a 2001 allegation against Sandusky to protect Penn State from bad publicity.

The late coach’s family, as well as Spanier, Curley and Schultz, dispute Freeh’s assertions.

Penn State Scandal: Sandusky asks judge to overturn abuse convictions is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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4 Things I’m Doing To Avoid Online Dating

f11db5f0f716c4a9ca6a841c67858ab3 4 Things I’m Doing To Avoid Online Dating

(Phatforums News / The Frisky) — I’ve promised my friends that whenever my dating dry up, I will gather up my and make a new online dating profile. Well, my prospects are drying up at a . Yet, I’ve made no move to get my electronic going. Why? I’m not entirely sure. I really have nothing against online dating, I just know that I’m better in person. Also, I enjoy the challenge of having to drum up new dating business without making a profile. That, and my online dating in the past have been, well, a scarring. I’m not going to go into great details but I will give you three : Obsessed With His Cat, Wanted By The Federal Government, Told Me About His Sex Therapy. I realize that these were isolated incidents, but the thought of having to sit through a date that even remotely resembles any of these makes me feel trepidatious. In the meantime, I am , grasping at straws. Here are the things I’m currently doing to put off the inevitable for just a little bit longer.

1. Looking To The . What I’m about to admit is embarrassing, so please don’t me. I have been working my way through all 11 seasons of the Food Network show “Chopped” looking for eligible bachelors. I’ve always had this fantasy of dating someone who wants to cook for me all the time and I like to watch people cook, so that was how the whole “Chopped” started. But it evolved into an actual dating tactic when I went out to dinner with some friends last week. There was a guy sitting at the table next to us and he looked really familiar to me (and he was hot). I was trying to place his face when I realized I had seen him on “Chopped.” I congratulated him on winning and we talked for a minute. No date (I think he was married), but it dawned on me: There are 11 seasons of “Chopped.” That’s 11 seasons worth of possible dates. Now every time a sexy male chef who lives in NYC is on the show, I go to his restaurant’s website and try to find out if he’s single. So far there were only two guys that seemed like prospects. I will be dining at their five-star restaurant and grilled cheese truck respectively. Then I will be exploring other shows on the Food Network.

2. Using My Business Cards. After three years of working at The Frisky, I finally got business cards. And I intend to use them, both professionally and to procure dates. I’ve been handing them out to tons of people. I am happy to report that my business card spaghetti to the wall method is working. I gave one to a guy I met in line to use the bathroom at a pizza place in Brooklyn and another to a woman at a party who said she knew a single, urban farmer. I’ve received communication from both.

3. Datecycling. I’ve been dating long enough now that it may be time to start recycling some of the people I’ve dated. Specifically, the guys who I really hit it off with but who were unavailable/in a bad place/just out of a breakup. So let me be clear here — anyone who screwed me over or treated me poorly or displayed red flags will not be considered. Anyone about whom I wonder, Whatever happened to him? will be receiving friendly “I just wanted to say hi” emails. Ya never know. Time changes everything, right?

4. Saying Yes To Yenta. Okay, so one time about five years ago, I agreed to let my mom set me up on a date and she took my moment of weakness and RAN with it. She color photocopied pictures of me and brought them to a friend’s wedding. She then proceeded to go table-to-table and show them to single guys and see if there were any takers. I KNOW. MORTIFYING. Anyhow, the parents of a 40-year-old cell phone salesman who lived in New Jersey were the only people who took the bait. In my inbox that Monday was an email from them saying that they saw my photos and heard that I was looking for a “nice Jewish gay.” The gay being a typo for guy. And that was the end of my mother setting me up. Or so I thought. I know I’m in a very desperate place because my mom is coming to town this summer for her high school reunion and told me that one of her friends knows lots of single guys who live in NYC. “Great!” I replied without thinking. I am so screwed. Maybe I should just make that profile.