May 18, 2013

Penn State Scandal: Family had to push Paterno to read Jerry Sandusky report

1dafcffeb810556f0365e94c980d5ad5 Penn State Scandal: Family had to push Paterno to read Jerry Sandusky report

(PhatzRadio / SI) had to be prodded by his family to read the regarding Jerry Sandusky and did not understand some of its graphic terminology, according to a new book.

The book, “Paterno” by Joe Posnanski, was purchased Friday by The Associated Press in advance of its release next week.

In the book, Posnanski describes a scene at Paterno’s home, two days after Sandusky had been charged with . Paterno’s family and a close adviser were trying to explain to the that there was a growing sentiment Paterno must have known for years about the accusations against Sandusky.

The book quotes Paterno as shouting “I’m not omniscient!”

Paterno did not want to read the report, but family members and communications and marketing assistant Guido D’Elia insisted that he must.

The book also indicates Paterno didn’t comprehend all the terms in the report, asking his son what sodomy meant.

According to the book, later that night Paterno’s son, Scott, told his mother that she should brace herself for the possibility that Joe could be fired.

Sue Paterno responded, “Scotty, that will kill him.”

Paterno was fired by two days later, on Nov. 9. He died in January at age 85 of cancer.

Sandusky, Paterno’s longtime , is jailed and awaiting sentencing after being convicted in June on 45 criminal counts involving 10 boys.

Former and now-retired are awaiting trial on charges of lying to a and failing to report the abuse allegations against Sandusky.

Paterno was not charged, though the NCAA last month slammed his beloved football program with a range of tough sanctions. Among them, the were forced to vacate 112 wins from 1998-2011, meaning Paterno no longer has the most coaching victories in major college football.

The penalty seemed to grow from a report commissioned by the school from former FBI . It said Paterno, Curley, Schultz and former Graham Spanier concealed allegations against Sandusky dating back to 1998. Paterno’s family and the three officials have all vehemently denied the conclusions.

Paterno had granted access to Posnanski to write a biography in 2011, well before Sandusky was charged.

“Nobody would argue – and certainly my book does not argue – that the good Joe Paterno did in his life should shield him from the horrors of his mistakes,” Posnanski wrote in a column for earlier this week. “Some would argue, especially in the white-hot emotion sparked by the latest revelations, that Paterno’s role in the Jerry Sandusky crimes invalidates whatever good he might have done. My book does not argue that either. My book, I believe, lets the reader make up his or her own mind.”

The book also details the long and frosty relationship Paterno had with Sandusky while they worked together at Penn State.

According to the book, the two were never friendly and late in Sandusky’s tenure, Paterno felt the defense was not performing well and neither was Sandusky.

Paterno did not want to fire Sandusky because he was so popular in the community and with fans, according to the book. The book indicates that Sandusky showed interest in taking an early retirement in 1999, and Paterno encouraged him to do so and let his assistant know he would not be the next head coach at Penn State.

Sandusky and Curley negotiated a retirement package, and among Sandusky’s demands was to stay on through the 1999 season.

The book indicates Paterno reluctantly agreed, and then regretted the decision when the team, which was considered one of the national championship favorites going into the season and reached No. 2 in the nation, lost three games late in the year with an underperforming defense.

Sandusky’s early retirement at age 55 has led to speculation that a 1998 allegation by a boy against Sandusky that was never prosecuted by authorities led to Penn State quietly pushing Sandusky out.

Paterno told a grand jury he was unaware of that allegation but evidence uncovered by Freeh report investigators suggest that he did.

According to the book, Paterno, who obsessively took and kept handwritten notes, had no notes in his files that mentioned the investigation.

Penn State Scandal: Family had to push Paterno to read Jerry Sandusky report is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

help Penn State Scandal: Family had to push Paterno to read Jerry Sandusky report
009b06f38695de0d0d383c24bf894a9e Penn State Scandal: Family had to push Paterno to read Jerry Sandusky report
help Penn State Scandal: Family had to push Paterno to read Jerry Sandusky report
1df4af0e6e8f900d91267ca68edfd555 Penn State Scandal: Family had to push Paterno to read Jerry Sandusky report
help Penn State Scandal: Family had to push Paterno to read Jerry Sandusky report
7f14bbf0b0c13fca3af83ff82c0b71ca Penn State Scandal: Family had to push Paterno to read Jerry Sandusky report
help Penn State Scandal: Family had to push Paterno to read Jerry Sandusky report
7c7d24e16ce9807a51c9caae4d336d4f Penn State Scandal: Family had to push Paterno to read Jerry Sandusky report
help Penn State Scandal: Family had to push Paterno to read Jerry Sandusky report
325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Penn State Scandal: Family had to push Paterno to read Jerry Sandusky report

325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Penn State Scandal: Family had to push Paterno to read Jerry Sandusky report

Penn State Scandal: NCAA initially discussed four-year death penalty for Penn State

ddc146c2304a7381c51ff8b22062a50b Penn State Scandal: NCAA initially discussed four year death penalty for Penn State

(PhatzRadio / SI) faced the threat of a four-year ban on playing football before the NCAA imposed sanctions this week over the school’s handling of the Jerry Sandusky child molestation , a said Wednesday.

David La Torre said the potential for the multiyear “death penalty” was floated during discussions between Rodney Erickson and NCAA officials before Penn State was hit Monday with a $60 million fine, a four-year bowl , reduced football scholarships and the forfeiture of 112 wins.

The met with Erickson on the subject at a Wednesday and afterward issued a statement calling the NCAA punishment “unfortunate” but better than the alternative – the so-called “death penalty.”

The penalty hasn’t been used since the NCAA suspended for the 1987 season. SMU then sat out the `88 season on its own and has never fully recovered its status in .

Reporters on Wednesday were barred from the conference room where the Penn State trustees met, and trustees avoided them after the meeting broke up.

The potential for a four-year ban, first reported by , showed how high the stakes were as college sports’ governing body considered how to respond to an internal school investigation by Freeh that found former and three other top helped conceal reports that Sandusky, a former , was abusing children.

NCAA said this week that if a total football ban had been imposed, other penalties would have accompanied it.

“If the death penalty were to be imposed, I’m quite sure that the executive committee and I … would not have agreed to just the death penalty. It would have included other penalties as well,” Emmert said as the sanctions were unveiled.

An NCAA spokeswoman declined further comment Wednesday on negotiations with Penn State.

Many alumni and some trustees were incensed over the unprecedented NCAA penalty – which likely will cripple Penn State’s football team for years to come – and Penn State’s quick acceptance of it.

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported Wednesday that Gov. Tom Corbett said the penalties “go well beyond” those responsible for the handling of the child sex abuse allegations, and he’s concerned about the impact on current students who are “bearing the brunt” of the sanctions.

A person with knowledge of the meeting said earlier Wednesday that trustees were to discuss whether Erickson had the authority to agree to the sanctions without first getting the board’s approval. The person was not authorized to discuss the meeting and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Some trustees had expressed concern that Erickson may have violated a board rule that says the board must authorize the signing of “contracts, legal documents, and other obligations.”

The board statement made no reference to the propriety of what Erickson had done, saying trustees held a discussion but did not take any votes.

“The board finds the punitive sanctions difficult and the process with the NCAA unfortunate,” the statement said. “But as we understand it, the alternatives were worse as confirmed by NCAA President Mark Emmert’s recent statement that Penn State was likely facing a multi-year death sentence.”

La Torre said Wednesday that Erickson had authority to act without the approval of the full board.

Penn State Scandal: NCAA initially discussed four-year death penalty for Penn State is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Penn State Scandal: NCAA initially discussed four year death penalty for Penn State

help Penn State Scandal: NCAA initially discussed four year death penalty for Penn State
009b06f38695de0d0d383c24bf894a9e Penn State Scandal: NCAA initially discussed four year death penalty for Penn State
help Penn State Scandal: NCAA initially discussed four year death penalty for Penn State
1df4af0e6e8f900d91267ca68edfd555 Penn State Scandal: NCAA initially discussed four year death penalty for Penn State
help Penn State Scandal: NCAA initially discussed four year death penalty for Penn State
7f14bbf0b0c13fca3af83ff82c0b71ca Penn State Scandal: NCAA initially discussed four year death penalty for Penn State
help Penn State Scandal: NCAA initially discussed four year death penalty for Penn State
7c7d24e16ce9807a51c9caae4d336d4f Penn State Scandal: NCAA initially discussed four year death penalty for Penn State
help Penn State Scandal: NCAA initially discussed four year death penalty for Penn State
325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Penn State Scandal: NCAA initially discussed four year death penalty for Penn State

325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Penn State Scandal: NCAA initially discussed four year death penalty for Penn State

Penn State right to fire Joe Paterno says governor

4ec3972cbc057a617fbf4205e871cae3 Penn State right to fire Joe Paterno says governor

(PhatzRadio / ) — Pennsylvania Governor Tom Corbett upset some people because he didn’t speak out on .

That number probably hasn’t decreased now that he has.

In an interview with Brian Taff of in Philadelphia, the governor agreed that the were within their rights to fire .

“He did a great deal for Penn State. I wish he would have followed up after he made that report,” said the governor who is also a school trustee. “He fulfilled his , but it continued after that. That’s the unfortunate part.”

At Paterno’s memorial, chairman Phil Knight said if “there’s a in this tragedy, it lies in that investigation, not in ’s response to it.”

Corbett, who did not attend the memorial, told Taff that “if there’s a in this, in my belief, it’s the man who’s been charged with the against the victims.”

Penn State right to fire Joe Paterno says governor is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Penn State right to fire Joe Paterno says governor

help Penn State right to fire Joe Paterno says governor
009b06f38695de0d0d383c24bf894a9e Penn State right to fire Joe Paterno says governor
help Penn State right to fire Joe Paterno says governor
1df4af0e6e8f900d91267ca68edfd555 Penn State right to fire Joe Paterno says governor
help Penn State right to fire Joe Paterno says governor
7f14bbf0b0c13fca3af83ff82c0b71ca Penn State right to fire Joe Paterno says governor
help Penn State right to fire Joe Paterno says governor
7c7d24e16ce9807a51c9caae4d336d4f Penn State right to fire Joe Paterno says governor
help Penn State right to fire Joe Paterno says governor
325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Penn State right to fire Joe Paterno says governor

325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Penn State right to fire Joe Paterno says governor

Family: Joe Paterno back in hospital for cancer observation

00765a7a6304791a73c6bae6b390bb5e Family: Joe Paterno back in hospital for cancer observation

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) — Former was admitted to the hospital Friday for observation due to minor complications from , his family said.

In a statement released to The , his family said that the 85-year-old Paterno continues to undergo a “regimen of treatments” after being diagnosed two months ago with what they have termed a treatable form of lung cancer.

The family hoped his latest stay would be brief. He most recently was in the hospital last month after re-breaking his following a fall at home. That stay also allowed Paterno to continue taking his cancer treatments, which have included radiation and chemotherapy.

Paterno had previously hurt his pelvis when he got accidentally hit in practice in August, forcing him to spend most of the regular season coaching from the press box.

“Although these issues have been challenging for and his family, he has total confidence in his doctors and is determined to make a full recovery,” the family said in the statement.

School trustees fired Paterno on Nov. 9 in the aftermath of charges against retired . Paterno, a witness before a investigating Sandusky, is not a of the .

Sandusky has denied . He is out on a bail and confined to house arrest while awaiting trial.

The trustees’ firing of Paterno has come under scrutiny from several former players, as well as some alumni critical at meetings this week with about the motivation to oust Paterno.

Others have slammed trustees for what they have called a lack of communication and transparency during a crisis in which Erickson has promised Penn State would be more open and transparent.

Paterno initially announced his retirement at the end of the season on the morning of Nov. 9. That day, he called the scandal “one of the great sorrows of my life. With the benefit of , I wish I had done more.”

The trustees fired him about 12 hours later in a hastily called news conference.

In a statement Thursday, trustees cited the serious allegations and “extraordinary circumstances” in referring to the board’s unanimous decision “that Coach Paterno could not be expected to continue to effectively perform his duties and that it was in the best interests of the University to make an immediate change in his status.”

Paterno remains employed as a tenured faculty member, and details of his retirement were being worked out and would be made public when finalized. The university intends to honor Paterno’s contract as if he had retired at the end of the 2011 season, the trustees said.

In response, Paterno’s son Scott said in a separate statement that “As has become apparent, the termination on November 9, with no notice or hearing, was not handled well.

“Joe Paterno has reiterated from the beginning that the first priority in this crisis is to serve the best interests of the victims,” Scott Paterno continued. “He believes strongly that everyone involved is entitled to due process.”

Family: Joe Paterno back in hospital for cancer observation is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Family: Joe Paterno back in hospital for cancer observation

help Family: Joe Paterno back in hospital for cancer observation
009b06f38695de0d0d383c24bf894a9e Family: Joe Paterno back in hospital for cancer observation
help Family: Joe Paterno back in hospital for cancer observation
1df4af0e6e8f900d91267ca68edfd555 Family: Joe Paterno back in hospital for cancer observation
help Family: Joe Paterno back in hospital for cancer observation
7f14bbf0b0c13fca3af83ff82c0b71ca Family: Joe Paterno back in hospital for cancer observation
help Family: Joe Paterno back in hospital for cancer observation
7c7d24e16ce9807a51c9caae4d336d4f Family: Joe Paterno back in hospital for cancer observation
help Family: Joe Paterno back in hospital for cancer observation
325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Family: Joe Paterno back in hospital for cancer observation

325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Family: Joe Paterno back in hospital for cancer observation