Ex-Penn St. Coach Sandusky Charged With Homo Sex Abuse of Young Boys

http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2013/08/20/more-settlements-near-in-penn-state-abuse-talks/

More Settlements Near In Penn State Abuse Talks
August 20, 2013 10:23 AM

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Negotiations between Penn State and young men who claim they were abused by Jerry Sandusky have begun to bear fruit, with lawyers involved saying there will be more announcements of settlements in the coming days.

The school’s trustees have set aside some $60 million to pay claims, and on Monday a lawyer working for Penn State said the one settlement so far should be followed by 24 more this week. Thirty-one young men have come forward to Penn State.

Attorney Michael Rozen said the pending agreements include most of the eight young men who testified last year against Sandusky, the school’s former assistant football coach now serving a prison sentence for child molestation.

Penn State said little over the weekend in response to an announcement by the lawyer for one of the eight, “Victim 5,” that his case was fully settled and he expected payment within a month. The school is paying out the claims through its insurance coverage and from interest revenues on loans made by the school to its own self-supporting entities.

Rozen said all of the deals are expected to include provisions that give the university the right to pursue claims against the university’s insurer, The Second Mile charity founded by Sandusky and The Second Mile’s insurer.

Sandusky is serving a 30- to 60-year sentence in state prison after being convicted last summer of 45 counts of child sexual abuse. Witnesses testified that he met victims through The Second Mile, an organization established to help at-risk children that ran camps and offered other services.

Rozen said the “value” of the claims depended in part on whether they happened after 2001, when top-ranking school officials were told by a graduate assistant about Sandusky with a child in a team shower, or before 1998, the earliest documented example of a Sandusky complaint.

“It’s what did Penn State know and what duty did they have?” Rozen said. “What did they know, when did they know it, and what duty — if any — did they have to act, and to what extent?”

He said claims for abuse before 1998 also may fall outside the statute of limitations that put time limits on how long victims have to sue.

Although some lawyers have said they were interested in settlements that require Penn State to make changes that might prevent such abuse from re-occurring, Rozen said those matters have been eclipsed by the widespread reforms the university has adopted or begun since a series of recommendations were made last summer in an internal report.

“I don’t think anybody could reasonably or rationally question the university’s commitment to doing things differently in the future,” Rozen said. “This was about trying to redress harm caused to young men by this really bad person, Sandusky.”

He declined to say how much the 25 cases are settling for, or provide a range of the settlements.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2013/08/23/atty-sanduskys-son-among-7-who-settle-with-psu/

Attorney: Sandusky’s Son Among 7 Who Settle With PSU
August 23, 2013 11:31 PM

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — A Philadelphia attorney said Friday seven young men he represents have finalized deals with Penn State over claims of abuse by the school’s former assistant football coach, Jerry Sandusky.

Lawyer Matt Casey said his clients include Sandusky’s adopted son, Matt Sandusky, as well as the young man known as “Victim 2″ in court records and three other victims who testified last summer against Jerry Sandusky at his criminal trial. “Victim 2″ was the boy then-graduate assistant Mike McQueary said he saw being attacked by Jerry Sandusky in a campus shower in 2001.

Casey said the terms of the settlements took shape some time ago, but it wasn’t until a week ago that he felt the deals were complete, followed by passing paperwork back and forth to memorialize it. He didn’t disclose the settlement terms.

“To say they’re relieved, I think, is a fair statement,” Casey said. “But it’s also accurate to say that while we’ve closed this chapter, there’s a whole lot of this that’s necessarily inadequate.”

The university has not announced the deals.

Nearly a week ago, a lawyer disclosed the first settlement among the 31 lawsuits filed against the school amid the Sandusky scandal, and a lawyer brought in by Penn State to facilitate negotiations said earlier this week that he expected 24 more cases to settle in the near future.

A Penn State spokesman on Friday said only that settlement talks continued to progress. He declined further comment.

Sandusky, 69, a former longtime defensive coach under Joe Paterno, was convicted last summer of 45 counts of child sexual abuse and is serving a decades-long state prison sentence. He maintains he is innocent, and an appeals hearing is scheduled for next month in Dallas, Pa.

Other lawyers involved in settlement talks said Friday they were still working with the university but none had a signed, final agreement.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Penn-State-May-Borrow-30M-for-Athletics-224490941.html

Penn State May Borrow $30M for Athletics
Thursday, Sep 19, 2013 | Updated 7:15 PM EDT

Penn State trustees may be asked to approve $30 million in borrowing to help its Athletic Department cover costs resulting partly from the Jerry Sandusky child sexual abuse scandal.

PennLive.com reported Thursday that the request would be part of a $750 million borrowing package that trustees will consider Friday.

The Athletic Department posted a $15 million profit as recently as 2011. But university Controller Joe Doncsecz says its expenses outstripped revenues by $6 million this year.

Needs covered by the borrowing include up to $25 million in short-term capital needs, a $10 million line of credit and millions more to cover debt service on the $60 million fine the NCAA imposed for the Sandusky scandal.

Athletic Director Dave Joyner says the department should be in the black by 2018.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...rno-Penn-State-Child-Sex-Abuse-226143441.html

Sandusky Denied New Trial
By MARK SCOLFORO | Wednesday, Oct 2, 2013 | Updated 11:32 AM

A Pennsylvania appeals court says Jerry Sandusky doesn't deserve a new trial after being convicted of sexually abusing 10 boys.

A three-judge Superior Court panel ruled Wednesday, barely two weeks after hearing oral arguments by a state prosecutor and lawyers for the former Penn State assistant football coach.

Sandusky says his lawyers didn't have enough time to prepare for trial, a prosecutor made improper references to Sandusky not testifying on his own behalf and the judge mishandled jury instructions.

The attorney general's office says the convictions should stand.

The 69-year-old Sandusky is serving a 30- to 60-year prison sentence.

His lawyer says he plans to seek Supreme Court review.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2013/10/08/lawyers-19-sandusky-victims-settle-with-penn-state/

Lawyers: 19 Sandusky Victims Settle With Penn State
October 8, 2013 12:29 PM

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Lawyers say 19 young men have settled with Penn State over claims of abuse by former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky.

The attorneys confirmed the settlements to The Associated Press, saying many if not all of them have received checks from the university.

The AP’s canvass indicates that at least six other claims have not been resolved, including two that have yet to be presented to Penn State.

Penn State isn’t commenting but has said it plans to eventually release the number of claimants and the amount they’ve been paid. Lawyers for the school say at least 31 have come forward but it’s unclear who some are or whether they have lawyers.

The school has set aside some $60 million to pay claims.

Several lawyers say the settlements prevent them from disclosing details.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Sandusky-Son-Drunk-Driving-227037131.html

Jerry Sandusky's Son Arrested for Suspected DUI
Wednesday, Oct 9, 2013 | Updated 10:21 AM

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Cleveland Browns executive Jon Sandusky, the son of former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky, was arrested early Tuesday morning on suspicion of drunken driving in Fargo, N.D.

Fargo police Lt. Joel Vettel told The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead that an officer spotted Jon Sandusky, 36, making an illegal turn. The officer pulled Sandusky over and decided he was driving under the influence after administering field sobriety tests.

A worker at the Cass County Jail confirmed Tuesday night that Sandusky had been booked and later released.

Sandusky is in his fourth season as Cleveland's director of player personnel after spending nine seasons with Philadelphia's personnel department. He's responsible for the evaluation of all college prospects and NFL free agents. He played safety for Penn State from 1996-99.

“We're aware of the situation and currently working to gather facts,” Browns spokesman Zak Gilbert told The Associated Press.

Jerry Sandusky, 69, a former defensive coordinator for the Nittany Lions, is serving 30 to 60 years in prison for sexually abusing 10 boys over 15 years. He was sentenced one year ago Wednesday.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2013/10/15/penn-states-sandusky-scandal-tab-crosses-50m/

Penn State’s Sandusky Scandal Tab Crosses $50M
October 15, 2013 3:02 PM

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) — Penn State’s costs related to the Jerry Sandusky child sex-abuse scandal have crossed $50 million.

A university website shows that Penn State was on the hook for about $50.5 million as of July 31, up $2.8 million from two months earlier. The amount covers legal fees, consulting work and other costs.

The university has said it won’t use tuition dollars, state appropriations or donations to pay the tab.

The retired assistant football coach was sentenced to 30-to-60 years in prison last year after being convicted on dozens of criminal counts of sexual abuse.

Sandusky’s November 2011 arrested triggered a massive scandal that saw the firing of late coach Joe Paterno, criminal charges against three university administrators and NCAA sanctions against the football program.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2013/10/28/penn-state-26-men-to-get-59-7m-over-sandusky-claims/

Penn State: 26 Men To Get $59.7 Million Over Sandusky Claims
October 28, 2013 1:36 PM
By Steve Tawa

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (CBS) — Penn State University says it has reached a milestone in out-of-court settlements with 26 young men who claimed they were abused by former football coach and convicted pedophile Jerry Sandusky.

The total dollar amount is $59.7 million.

Keith Masser, chair of the Penn State board of trustees, says the objectives included “a fair settlement that respects the privacy of the individuals involved.”

In that same PSU statement, university president Rodney Erickson says he hopes the settlement agreement is “another step forward in the healing process for those hurt by Mr. Sandusky and another step forward for Penn State.”

PSU officials say of the 26 settlements, 23 are fully signed and three are agreed in principle, noting that “the settlement amounts will not be funded by student tuition, taxpayer funds, or donations.”

The university says various liability insurance policies will cover the settlements, and that the terms of the settlements contain a release of all claims against Penn State.

Penn State received claims from 32 people who were or allege that they were victims of Sandusky, but the university either has rejected as being without merit or has not yet made a determination on the remaining six.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Expenses-for-Penn-State-Scandal-Near-52M-232372741.html

Expenses for Penn State Scandal Near $52M
Monday, Nov 18, 2013 | Updated 1:27 PM EST

Penn State's costs related to the Jerry Sandusky child sex-abuse scandal are nearing $52 million.

A university website shows the school has racked up just under $51.8 million in expenses as of Aug. 31. That's up $1.3 million from the figure reported at the end of July.

The amount covers legal fees, consulting work and other costs. The university has said it won't use tuition dollars, state appropriations or donations to pay the tab. Insurance might cover some claims.

The costs are separate from the $59.7 million settlement that Penn State agreed last month to pay to 26 victims of the former assistant football coach.

Sandunghole was sentenced to 30-to-60 years in prison last year after being convicted on dozens of criminal counts of sexual abuse.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2013/11/21/victim-9-files-abuse-claim-vs-sandusky-penn-state/

Victim 9 Files Abuse Claim vs. Sandusky, Penn State
November 21, 2013 2:40 PM

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — A young man who testified at Jerry Sandusky’s sex abuse trial is suing the former coach and Penn State for what he says was nearly four years of assaults while he was a child.

The lawsuit by the man known as Victim 9 in criminal court records was filed Thursday in Philadelphia Common Pleas Court.

It claims he wouldn’t have been victimized if university officials had reported Sandusky to police.

A university spokesman declined comment, and a message left for a lawyer who’s represented Sandusky in other civil litigation wasn’t immediately returned.

The lawsuit asserts an assault and battery claim against Sandusky. The university is sued for negligence and recklessness, tortious conduct, misrepresentation and infliction of emotional distress.

Six of 45 counts for which Sandusky was convicted concern Victim 9.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2013/12/01/state-details-case-against-ex-penn-state-president/

State Details Case Against Ex-Penn State President
December 1, 2013 7:30 PM

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — The state attorney general’s office filed papers Friday that detail the lies it says former Penn State President Graham Spanier told during his grand jury testimony over the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse case.

The allegations in the prosecutors’ itemized list aren’t new, but the specifics were listed to answer Spanier’s request this fall for details of the charges.

In the filing, prosecutors listed portions of Spanier’s April 2011 testimony before a grand jury. In one section, prosecutors asked Spanier whether university officials discussed filing a police report over a 2001 shower encounter witnessed by former assistant football coach Mike McQueary, and Spanier said no, The Centre Daily Times reported.

But emails discovered later appear to show a discussion about whether to report that incident.

Sandusky, the school’s longtime defensive coach, was convicted last year of 45 counts of child sexual abuse. He is serving a 30- to 60-year prison sentence.

Spanier has maintained his innocence. He is one of three former Penn State administrators awaiting trial on charges they engaged in a criminal cover-up of complaints about Sandusky. Former vice president Gary Schultz and former athletic director Tim Curley also deny the allegations.

Spanier also testified that during discussions about Sandusky’s conduct with a young boy in the shower, then-head coach Joe Paterno’s name “was never mentioned to the best of my recollection,” according to the prosecutors’ filing. In addition, Spanier said he had never been told about a prior on-campus child abuse allegation made against Sandusky in 1998.

But McQueary has testified that he told Paterno about seeing Sandusky in the shower with the boy in 2001. And the lead state prosecutor said during the officials’ preliminary hearing in July that the men knew police investigated complaints about Sandusky showering with boys in 1998.

In October, Penn State announced it was paying nearly $60 million to settle abuse claims by 26 young men. It’s not clear how many suits are still pending against the school following those settlements, but at least one new one has been filed.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...used-of-Cover-Up-Set-for-Court-235873601.html

Ex-PSU Officials Accused of Cover-Up Set for Court
By Mark Scolforo | Saturday, Dec 14, 2013 | Updated 3:17 PM EST

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Tim Curley and Gary Schultz


Lawyers for three former Penn State officials accused of covering up child sex abuse allegations against Jerry Sandusky are headed to a Pennsylvania courthouse this week.

The hearing scheduled to start Tuesday in Harrisburg will focus on their claim that their right to legal representation was severely compromised when they appeared before an investigative grand jury.

The defendants are the school's former athletic director Tim Curley, former vice president Gary Schultz and former president Graham Spanier. (SPAN'-yer) :rolleyes: The case has lasted more than two years since charges were first filed and there isn't a trial date in sight.

They have argued the charges of perjury, obstruction, conspiracy, child endangerment and failure to properly report suspected child abuse should be dismissed.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Ex-PSU-lawyer-outlines-alleged-Spanier-lies-236477831.html

Ex-PSU Lawyer Outlines Alleged Spanier Lies
Thursday, Dec 19, 2013 | Updated 7:37 AM EST

Former Penn State general counsel Cynthia Baldwin said in grand jury testimony released Wednesday that the university's then-president made a series of lies and misleading statements before and after Jerry Sandusky was arrested.

The documents include testimony from a year ago in which Baldwin directly contradicted a statement made by Graham Spanier to a reporter that the first he knew the investigation involved allegations of sexual abuse against Sandusky was when the former assistant football coach was charged in November 2011.

Baldwin told the grand jury that "of course he knew,'' and she believed "that he is not a person of integrity.''

Spanier lawyer Liz Ainslie said the documents do not amount to evidence against him. :rolleyes:

"A criminal charge cannot under the law be brought against an individual without evidence," Ainslie said. "What I have read is not evidence, it's conclusions that were fed to Cynthia Baldwin by the prosecutor."

The records also indicate Baldwin told the grand jury judge she represented the university when Spanier testified before the grand jury in April 2011, but did not contradict Spanier when he soon after identified her as his lawyer.

Questions about who she represented when Spanier and two other defendants appeared before the grand jury have delayed their trial on charges they covered up complaints about Sandusky.

Court officials said Wednesday that additional documents the presiding judge has unsealed would be posted online in the coming days, perhaps as early as Thursday.

Spanier, former athletic director Tim Curley and former vice president Gary Schultz face charges of perjury, obstruction, conspiracy, child endangerment and failure to properly report suspected child abuse.

Dauphin County Judge Todd Hoover on Tuesday directed their lawyers and prosecutors to submit proposed findings of fact and legal conclusions ahead of a hearing for them to argue the issues related to their grand jury appearances and whether Baldwin's actions have violated their right to legal counsel.

The documents show the grand jury judge, Barry Feudale, pressed Baldwin about who she represented when Spanier testified in April 2011.

"The university," Baldwin replied. "The university solely?" the judge asked. "Yes, I represent the university solely," she said.

But a short time later, after Spanier was sworn in, Spanier identified Baldwin, sitting behind him, as his lawyer. At one point Baldwin interrupted the prosecutor to make a suggestion about his line of questioning.

Ainslie said Feudale and the prosecutor should have spoken up.

"It shows that (Spanier) was deceived about the appearance in the grand jury, and on the basis of that appearance in the grand jury, he's been charged with perjury," Ainslie said. "And the principle witness against him apparently is the woman who allowed him to believe she was acting in his best interests."

Spanier testified repeatedly that he was never told about a 1998 incident in which a mother complained to police after her son returned with wet hair after an outing with Sandusky.

"I certainly did not have anything brought to my attention," Spanier told the grand jury.

Baldwin said Spanier told the trustees his own grand jury testimony was secret but Feudale had told him that he could disclose it, Baldwin testified.

She contradicted a statement Spanier made to the board of trustees that Baldwin turned over a thumb drive to prosecutors including all his emails after 2004.

The documents also show state prosecutor Frank Fina telling Feudale that investigators "were told there was a 1984 allegation" they were looking into regarding Sandusky and "contact with (a) minor." Fina said there was no paperwork regarding the 1984 allegation, and the topic was not raised again.

Sandusky was not charged with anything dating back to 1984, but was convicted last year of 45 criminal counts for sexual abuse of 10 boys. He is seeking state Supreme Court review of his conviction.

Baldwin's lawyer Charles De Monaco told Feudale in October 2012, as she prepared to testify before the grand jury, that she represented Penn State and the administrators "so long as their interests were aligned with the university."

On the stand, Baldwin said she pressed Spanier, Curley and Schultz for any Sandusky-related materials as the state investigation ramped up in early 2011, and all three said they had nothing. The university later found email traffic from 1998 among the three discussing that complaint, and investigators eventually recovered a file of Schultz's about the Sandusky complaints.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...ke-In-Pension-Hearing-By-Video-236609811.html

Jerry Sandusky to Partake in Pension Hearing
Friday, Dec 20, 2013 | Updated 10:37 AM EST

Jerry Sandusky will take part early next month in his first public proceeding -- albeit via video link -- since he was sentenced to decades in prison for child molestation.

A hearing is scheduled for Jan. 7 into whether a Pennsylvania agency should have stripped the former Penn State assistant football coach of the benefits he had been getting through the state's pension system.

A spokeswoman for the State Employees' Retirement System said Thursday that plans are for Sandusky to participate in the three-day hearing through a video connection to the state prison where he is confined.

Sandusky and his wife, Dottie, lost his $4,900-a-month pension last year on the day he was sentenced to 30 to 60 years. A hearing examiner will recommend to the system's board about whether the pension forfeiture should remain in place.

The retirement system said Sandusky's convictions for involuntary deviate sexual intercourse and indecent assault met the standards of the Public Employee Pension Forfeiture Act, and stopped retirement payments immediately.

Penn State employees can enroll in the system, although they are not state employees. Penn State is considered "state-related," along with Temple, Lincoln and Pitt.

Sandusky's lawyer has said he received only six payments from the university between 2000 and 2008.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Ex-PSU-Lawyer-Flip-Flopped-on-Spanier-236906361.html

Ex-PSU Lawyer Flip-Flopped on Spanier
By Mark Scolforo | Sunday, Dec 22, 2013 | Updated 12:36 AM EST

Records from a federal investigation show a lawyer whose role in the Jerry Sandusky investigation has held up the criminal prosecutions of three former top administrators praised one of them effusively just months before testifying he was "not a person of integrity."

The notes made public Sunday by a lawyer for former Penn State president Graham Spanier indicate the university's former general counsel, Cynthia Baldwin, told the federal Office of Personnel Management in early 2012 that Spanier was very smart, "a man of integrity,'' and "very forthcoming and open" with the board of trustees.

About six months later, Baldwin, a former state Supreme Court justice, testified before a grand jury that Spanier told a series of lies and misleading statements before and after Sandusky was arrested in late 2011 on child molestation charges.

Spanier attorney Liz Ainslie said the federal investigation resulted in the restoration of Spanier's top security clearance, although it was again taken away when he was charged in late 2012 for an alleged cover-up of complaints about Sandusky.

Baldwin's lawyer Charles De Monaco said Friday that Baldwin's view of Spanier changed during the summer of 2012, particularly after the release of a scathing report into the Sandusky matter produced for Penn State by former FBI director Louis Freeh.

"Much like the public at large, Justice Baldwin learned for the first time in the summer of 2012 about the conduct of the defendants as a result of documents and e-mails which were discussed for the first time with the release of the Freeh Report in July 2012," De Monaco said. "For those reasons, Justice Baldwin was asked about these issues when she testified before the grand jury in October 2012."

Ainslie said Baldwin's grand jury testimony was "shamefully inaccurate" and had not been subject to defense questioning.

"Ms. Baldwin has so far managed to avoid cross-examination," Ainslie said. "But that day is coming."

Baldwin was the university's top lawyer in early 2011, when she accompanied Spanier and the two others to grand jury appearances. The men all say they believed she was acting as their attorney.

Spanier, former vice president Gary Schultz and former athletic director Tim Curley face charges of perjury, obstruction, conspiracy, child endangerment and failure to properly report suspected child abuse. Spanier was charged a year after the other two.

The judge in their case last week cut short a planned four-day hearing into Baldwin's actions, and quashed a subpoena calling for her to testify. Defense attorneys have said their clients' rights to legal counsel were violated and are seeking to have the cases thrown out.

Dauphin County Judge Todd Hoover has instructed prosecutors and defense attorneys to submit proposed findings of fact and legal conclusions, after which he will schedule oral argument on the issue. No trial date has been scheduled.

Sandusky is serving a 30- to 60-year state prison sentence after being convicted of 45 counts of child sexual abuse. He maintains his innocence and is asking the state Supreme Court to take up his case.

Spanier remains a tenured faculty member at Penn State. Curley and Schultz have retired. Baldwin served as a county judge, president of the Penn State Board of Trustees and a state Supreme Court justice before her role as the university's general counsel involved her in the Sandusky investigation.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...ky-tries-to-hang-onto-his-penn-state-pension/

From Prison, Sandusky Tries To Hang Onto His Penn State Pension
January 7, 2014 1:44 PM
By Tony Romeo and Todd Quinones

HARRISBURG, Pa. (CBS) — Convicted child molester Jerry Sandusky spent the morning today seeking to overturn a ruling that denied him his state pension.

State law was changed in 2004 to include sex offenses against students to the list of reasons for which school employees can lose their pensions.

A big question involves whether the law applies to Sandusky, who retired from Penn State in 1999.

Sandusky, testifying via video link from the prison where he is serving a 30-60 year term for child abuse (see related story), said an agreement that detailed terms and perks extended to him after his retirement reflected his choice not pursue more lucrative positions.

“The opportunities that had existed to gain more financially I turned down,” Sandusky told the hearing officer, “and as a result, they decided to reward me for my service by this contract.”

But an attorney for the State Employees Retirement System attempted to use that agreement to show that Sandusky remained actively connected to Penn State after his retirement from active coaching and after the law was changed in 2004.

Lawyers argued that it was through “The Second Mile” that Sandusky abused two of his victims after 2004, which is when the law justifying the forfeiture of pensions was amended to include sex crimes.

However, Sandusky’s lawyer argued that when he retired from coaching in 1999 he was no longer a Penn State employee.

Sandusky says, “My primary purpose was to help young people.”

A final ruling is still weeks away and no matter the outcome it can still be appealed to another court.

Sandusky is waiting to hear if the state Supreme Court will hear his appeal to his criminal conviction.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...use-Penn-State-Today-Interview-249714611.html

Jerry Sandusky's Wife: Victims Were "Manipulated," "Saw Money"
Dottie Sandusky was joined during the interview by filmmaker John Ziegler
By Cathy Rainone | Wednesday, Mar 12, 2014 | Updated 10:43 AM EDT

The dim bulb wife of convicted child sex abuser Jerry Sandusky broke her silence for the first time since the former Penn State assistant football coach was sent to jail, saying the case against her husband was based on lies and his accusers motivated by money.

“Do I believe him? I definitely believe him. :rolleyes: Because if I didn't believe him, when I testified at trial, I could have not said what I said. I would have had to tell the truth," Dottie Sandusky said in an exclusive interview with NBC’s “Today” show from her home in State College, Pa.

“I think it was, they were manipulated, and they saw money,’’ she told NBC's Matt Lauer. “Once lawyers came into the case, they said there was money.”

Jerry Sandusky, 70, was sentenced to 30 to 60 years in prison after being convicted in June 2012 on 45 of 48 charges of sexually abusing young boys over a 15-year period.

When asked if her husband of 47 years was guilty of inappropriate behavior with some of the young boys who have accused him, Sandusky said, “I don't believe that, I believe he showered with kids. That’s the generation that Jerry grew up in ....There were always people coming in and out no matter what time that was.”

Sandusky was joined during the interview by filmmaker John Ziegler, who researched the case for two years and has interviewed Jerry Sandusky twice in prison. He believes Jerry Sandusky is innocent.

“I presumed, like a lot of people, that Dottie has to be delusional or not understand the case,’’ Ziegler said. “I'm certain of one thing above everything else after two years of investigating this case, and that is that Dottie Sandusky is not delusional. She knows the case better than the vast majority of media members, and she is positive that Jerry Sandusky is innocent.”

During the interview, Sandusky took Matt Lauer to her basement where the accusers said some of the abuse occurred.

"It is not a dungeon," she said. "It is not what those kids said. You can scream, and you can hear it up to the second floor.”

Lauer pointed out that the house is quite small and that one of the victims said he screamed in the basement while he was sexually abused and that Dottie never came down to check what was going on. Dottie said she never heard anyone “because he didn’t scream.”

Lauer also asked about an article in The Washington Post in which Melinda Henneberger wrote, "We know that predators prey on the more vulnerable, who they can later paint as unstable; that’s standard. But they also tend to choose spouses who can be counted on to suppress any unpleasant ideas that might occur to them."

"I'm not a weak spouse,'' said Sandusky, who visits her husband once a week at a maximum security prison in Waynesburg, Penn., a three-hour drive from her home. "As you know...they call me 'Sarge' because Jerry said I kept everybody in line. If they want to say that, let them say that. I know who I am. And I know who Jerry is. And I know he did not do the horrible crimes that he's convicted of.”

Lauer pointed out to Ziegler and Sandusky that it may be hard for the public to believe that everyone in the case has been manipulated or is lying.

“Look, the reality is, I understand exactly what you're saying,’’ Ziegler said. “People will think that this is insane because they were given a perception of this case that was totally wrong.”
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2014/04/02/pa-high-court-wont-hear-sandusky-appeal/

Pa. High Court Won’t Hear Sandusky Appeal
April 2, 2014 4:07 PM

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HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky’s child molestation conviction will not be reviewed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, under an order issued Wednesday.

Sandusky asked the court to take up his 45-count conviction, arguing his lawyers were rushed too quickly to trial in 2012 and that prosecutors improperly made reference to his decision not to testify.

He also said the trial judge should have issued a jury instruction about how long it took his victims to report the abuse and that jurors should not have been told to weigh evidence of his good character against all other evidence.

The state attorney general’s office had countered that Sandusky did not provide sufficient basis for the Supreme Court to take up the matter, and that decisions made by the trial judge did not violate his rights.

Sandusky, 70, is serving a 30- to 60-year prison sentence for sexual abuse of 10 boys. His lawyer said he is disappointed the court denied his appeal.

Eight of his victims testified at trial, describing a range of abuse from grooming and fondling to oral and anal sex, including attacks in the basement of Sandusky’s home outside State College. Another witness, a graduate assistant for the team who had been a quarterback for the Nittany Lions, testified he saw Sandusky having sexual contact with a boy inside a team shower late on a Friday night.

Sandusky did not testify on his own behalf but has maintained his innocence. His lawyer has said the victims’ testimony was motivated by a desire to cash in. Penn State announced last year it was paying $59.7 million to 26 people who had raised claims of abuse at Sandusky’s hands.

His defense lawyers repeatedly sought delays before trial, saying they were swamped by an enormous amount of material from prosecutors and needed more time to examine the background of his accusers.

During a post-sentencing hearing, however, defense attorney Joe Amendola acknowledged that he had not discovered anything afterward that would have changed his trial strategy.

Sandusky’s 2011 arrest led to the firing of Hall of Fame football coach Joe Paterno and significant penalties levied against the school by the NCAA. Paterno was stripped of 111 of his 409 career wins while the school was fined $60 million, banned from bowl games for four years and faced steep scholarship cuts.

Three other high-ranking school officials, including the then-president, face charges they covered up complaints about Sandusky. Their case has not yet gone to trial.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2014/06/23/sanduskys-wife-prosecution-report-isnt-truthful/

Sandusky’s Wife: Prosecution Report Isn’t Truthful
June 23, 2014 1:38 PM

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Jerry Sandusky’s wife says Pennsylvania’s top prosecutor lacks the courage to admit the former Penn State assistant coach isn’t guilty of the child molestation charges that sent him to prison. :rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:

Dottie Sandusky issued a statement Monday after Attorney General Kathleen Kane released a report into how the case was handled by police and prosecutors and why it took nearly three years to file charges.

Dottie Sandusky says the charges were delayed because there was no legitimate evidence against him.

The report questions why their home wasn’t searched until 2011 even though authorities fielded a complaint against Sandusky in late 2008.

Dottie Sandusky says if they’d searched earlier they’d have found nothing. The report says the search produced victims’ photos and a highlighted list of participants from his children’s charity.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2014/06/23/arbitrator-says-sandusky-should-get-pension-back/

Arbitrator Rules To Reinstate Sandusky’s Pension
June 23, 2014 5:25 PM

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — A Pennsylvania arbitrator has ruled that Jerry Sandusky’s $4,900-a-month Penn State pension be reinstated, including back payments from October 2012, when his child molestation conviction prompted the state retirement system to end his benefits.

Hearing examiner Michael Bangs wrote in an opinion dated Thursday but made public Monday that it was clear the former assistant football coach was no longer a Penn State employee after his 1999 retirement. That was critical to the pension dispute because the state Pension Forfeiture Act was expanded five years later, in 2004, to add sexual offenses to the list of crimes that trigger forfeiture.

“The Pennsylvania forfeiture law is simply not applicable to SERS’ members who commit crimes after they have begun receiving their pensions, which is really what SERS is attempting to do in this case,” Bangs wrote. “The courts simply cannot extend the current law beyond any rational interpretation of its current form.”

Both Sandusky and the State Employees’ Retirement System can respond to the recommendation, after which the retirement system board will decide whether the pension should be reinstated. That could occur this fall, and if Sandusky loses he could appeal to state courts.

Sandusky’s lawyer, Chuck Benjamin, said Monday he was pleased with the ruling, which accepted Benjamin’s argument that a report by former FBI director Louis Freeh was incorrect when it claimed Sandusky received 71 post-retirement payments from Penn State. In fact there were just a handful, and half were travel reimbursements, Benjamin said.

“The unfortunate thing here is that SERS acted on the mistaken belief that the Freeh report was correct when the undisputed evidence showed it wasn’t correct,” Benjamin said.

Sandusky testified in January on the pension issue by video link from a state prison in southwestern Pennsylvania. He was the only witness his lawyers called.

His pension benefits include a 50 percent survivor’s annuity for his wife, Dottie.

The 70-year-old Sandusky is serving a 30- to 60-year state prison sentence after being convicted two years ago of sexual abuse of 10 boys.
 
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