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

http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...nsion-system-says-it-will-give-sandusky-211k/

AP: Pennsylvania Pension System Says It Will Give Sandusky $211K
December 23, 2015 2:08 PM

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Pennsylvania’s state government pension system is about to send Jerry Sandusky a $211,000 check to cover payments going back to when it illegally stopped his retirement benefits after he was sentenced for child molestation.

The State Employees’ Retirement System sent a letter to Sandusky’s lawyer last week, informing him of the payment and that his $4,900 monthly annuity will resume in January. The Associated Press obtained the letter on Wednesday.

The 71-year-old former Penn State assistant coach is serving a lengthy prison term after being convicted in 2012 of sexual abuse of 10 boys.

A court ruled on Nov. 13 that the pension system was wrong to classify Sandusky as a university employee at the time of the abuse crimes that were the basis of his pension forfeiture.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...ident-Pursuing-Defamation-Suit-364867851.html

Penn State President Pursuing Defamation Suit
By Mark Scolforo
Published 50 minutes ago

penn-state-abuse.jpg

Former Penn State President Graham Spanier


A judge is clearing the way for former Penn State President Graham Spanier (SPAN'-yur) to pursue a defamation lawsuit against an ex-FBI director whose team issued a university-commissioned report critical of Spanier for his handling of complaints about Jerry Sandusky.

The decision comes despite a pending criminal case against Spanier that accuses him of covering up allegations about Sandusky, who was later convicted of sexually molesting boys.

Judge Robert Eby ended a 2-year hiatus in the matter Monday, saying he will deal on a case-by-case basis with Spanier's constitutional protection against self-incrimination.

Spanier's lawyers say he doesn't intend to invoke his Fifth Amendment rights in the civil case against Louis Freeh (LOO'-ee free).

The judge also ruled Spanier can't add Penn State as a defendant.

Spanier was forced out as president after Sandusky's 2011 arrest.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...erry-Sandusky-Requests-Closure-365000641.html

Charity Founded by Jerry Sandusky Requests Closure
Published 2 hours ago

Jerry-Sandusky-P2.jpg


The charity founded by convicted former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky has filed a court petition seeking permission to go out of business.

WJAC-TV reports the Second Mile organization filed the 40-page petition in Centre County on Monday.

The charity's board says fundraising has dropped to nothing and nearly all its assets have been distributed in the wake of Sandusky's arrest and conviction on charges he molested several boys, including some he met through the charity.

The court filing formalizes the board's decision in July to close the charity. The petition asks the court to transfer any remaining assets to the state attorney general's office and to officially dissolve the charity.

Sandusky founded the group in 1977 with the stated purpose of helping disadvantaged children. :rolleyes:
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...inst-penn-state-ex-administrators-thrown-out/

Some Charges Dropped Against Former PSU Officials In Sandusky Case
January 22, 2016 2:12 PM By Tony Romeo

77720911.jpg

Former Penn State President Graham Spanier. (credit: Hunter Martin/ Getty Images)


HARRISBURG, Pa. (CBS) — The Commonwealth’s case against three former Penn State officials who had been charged with covering up the Jerry Sandusky sex abuse scandal suffered a severe blow Friday with a ruling by state Superior Court.

The Superior Court ruling means the dropping of some charges against former Penn State President Graham Spanier, and two other former administrators, Tim Curley and Gary Schultz.

Lawyers for the three men had argued that there was confusion about their clients’ legal representation when they appeared before a grand jury along with a Penn State attorney.

Now Superior Court has ruled that the Penn State attorney’s testimony against the trio should not have been allowed. Charges of perjury, obstruction of justice and conspiracy have been dropped against Spanier and Schultz, while charges of obstruction of justice and conspiracy have been dropped against Curley.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...ultz-Sandusky-Case-Child-Abuse-374091911.html

Ex-Penn State Officials Won't Face Some of Most Serious Charges in Handling of Sandusky Scandal
By Mark Scolforo
Published 6 hours ago

A Pennsylvania appeals court said Wednesday it would not reconsider its recent decision throwing out some of the most serious criminal charges against three former Penn State administrators related to their handling of the Jerry Sandusky child molestation scandal.

Superior Court posted an order denying the attorney general's office's petition for re-argument in the case of former university president Graham Spanier, former vice president Gary Schultz and former athletic director Tim Curley. :stooges: Lawyers for all three men declined comment, and a spokesman for the prosecutors said the decision was under review.

The attorney general's office could seek an appeal to the state Supreme Court, or press forward for trial on the remaining counts in county court in Harrisburg.

The order was not publicly available because the entire appellate case file is sealed, the clerk's office said.

A three-judge panel in January threw out charges of perjury, obstruction and conspiracy, but left in place charges of failure to report suspected child abuse and endangering the welfare of children, and a perjury count against Curley.

The central issue in the appeal, and a main reason why charges first filed in 2011 and 2012 have not gone to trial, has been the role played during grand jury proceedings by Penn State's then-general counsel, Cynthia Baldwin.

The January ruling said that Baldwin's own grand jury testimony was a violation of attorney-client privilege and that she did not adequately explain she was representing them as university employees and not working to protect their individual interests. The decision overturned a county judge's ruling that said Baldwin's actions were proper, clearing the way for trial.

Curley, Schultz and Spanier testified in early 2011 to a grand jury about the response to complaints regarding Sandusky while they were serving in high-ranking positions at the university.

Sandusky, the school's defensive football coach for decades under Joe Paterno, was convicted in 2012 of 45 counts of child sexual abuse and is appealing while serving a 30- to 60-year state prison sentence.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2016/05/06/paternos-son-supposed-1976-allegation-vs-father-is-bunk/

Court Documents Allege Boy Told Coach Paterno Sandusky Molested Him Decades Ago
May 6, 2016 7:37 AM By Justin Finch

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — New court documents allege a boy told coach Joe Paterno that Jerry Sandusky molested him decades ago.

Paterno’s family calls the allegations false.

It all came out in a Philadelphia court room this week and this morning, it hit the papers.

Joe Paterno is on the Daily News sports cover with the headline: ‘Nittany Lyin?’

His family denies the unproven claims and wants a thorough and public investigation.

One of the allegations dates to 1976 when a boy reportedly told Paterno that assistant coach Jerry Sandusky molested him.

Additional claims allege other coaches and team staff witnessed or heard of Sandusky’s sexual misbehavior in the late 1980s.

The reports surfaced in a judge’s ruling Wednesday.

The dispute was between Penn State and its insurance company over Sandusky victim settlement payouts.

A Penn State spokesman says officials are aware of the allegations and will not comment further.

Again, no reports of these claims have been proven. :rolleyes:

Joe Paterno passed away in 2012, the same year Sandusky was sentenced to up to 60 years in prison after being convicted of abusing 10
boys.

A judge recently approved a hearing for Sandusky that could lead to a new trial.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...-by-Jerry-Sandusky-Report-Says-378488875.html

Up to 6 Penn State Coaches Saw 'Inappropriate Behavior' by Jerry Sandusky, Report Says
By NBC10 Staff
Published at 2:09 AM EDT on May 7, 2016

As many as six assistant coaches at Penn State whose careers at the school spanned three decades witnessed "inappropriate behavior" between convicted sex offender Jerry Sandusky and boys, NBC News has learned.

One coach witnessed an incident in the late 1970s while three other coaches allegedly saw inappropriate conduct between Sandusky and boys in the early and mid-1990s, sources with direct knowledge of the legal proceedings told NBC News.

The revelations come on the heels of an allegation that former Penn State football coach Joe Paterno, under which Sandusky worked as a longtime assistant, was told in 1976 by a boy that Sandusky had molested him.

That allegation came to light this week in reports of an order issued by a Philadelphia judge who is presiding over litigation between an insurance company and the university.

Paterno's son described the allegation, reportedly made by the insurance company, as "bunk." :rolleyes:

Sandusky is appealing his conviction, which put him behind bars for 30 to 60 years. He was convicted by molesting numerous boys through a charity he started in the mid-1990s.

NBC News reported Friday night that as many as six assistant coaches witnessed "inappropriate behavior."

"You won't believe what I just saw," one coach told a room full of Penn State football staff after an incident in the 1990s, according to NBC News, which cited sources who spoke to a person who was in the room.

Court papers made public this week detailed 1987 and 1978 encounters between Sandusky and children allegedly witnessed by two other coaches. The behavior was described, according to the court documents, as “inappropriate” or “sexual.”
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...ettlements-covered-1971-sandusky-abuse-claim/

Penn State Settlements Covered 1971 Sandusky Abuse Claim
May 8, 2016 8:20 PM

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (CBS) – Penn State’s legal settlements with Jerry Sandusky’s accusers cover alleged abuse dating to 1971, which was 40 years before his arrest, the university said Sunday, providing the first confirmation of the time frame of abuse claims that have led to big payouts.

The disclosure came as Penn State President Eric Barron decried newly revealed allegations that former football coach Joe Paterno was told in 1976 that Sandusky had sexually abused a child and that two assistant coaches witnessed either inappropriate or sexual contact in the late 1980s. Paterno, who died in 2012, had said the first time he had received a complaint against Sandusky was in 2001.

Barron said the accusations were unsubstantiated :rolleyes:, and suggested that the university is being subjected unfairly to what he called rumor and innuendo. :no2:

Responding to questions about the president’s statement and claims against the school, university spokesman Lawrence Lokman told The Associated Press he could confirm that the earliest year of alleged abuse covered in Penn State’s settlements is 1971.

Sandusky graduated from Penn State in 1965 and returned as a full-time defensive coach in 1969.

The university has paid out more than $90 million to settle more than 30 civil claims involving Sandusky, now 72 and serving a lengthy prison sentence for the sexual abuse of 10 children. But few details have been provided on the payouts by either the school or lawyers for those who said they were Sandusky’s victims even before the period covered by the criminal investigation.

The allegations about Paterno and the assistant coaches were cited in a ruling last week by Philadelphia Judge Gary Glazer in litigation between an insurance company and Penn State over how much of the settlement costs the school must bear.

The insurers cited an allegation that a boy had told the longtime Penn State football coach in 1976 that he had been molested by Sandusky. The court document also cited statements, from those claiming they had been Sandusky’s victims, that two unidentified assistant coaches had said they witnessed inappropriate contact between Sandusky and children in the late 1980s.

Barron wrote the university community Sunday that he was “appalled by the rumor, innuendo and rush to judgment” following Glazer’s disclosure of some allegations made against Paterno and some of his assistants.

Barron said those allegations, and others raised in some news reports in recent days, are “unsubstantiated and unsupported by any evidence other than a claim by an alleged victim.”

“Coach Paterno is not alive to refute them. His family has denied them,” Barron said.

Some of the press reports, he said, “should be difficult for any reasonable person to believe.”

Barron said few crimes are as heinous as child sex assault, and the university is committed to prevention, treatment and education.

But he said he had “had enough of the continued trial of the institution in various media.”

Sue Paterno, who has defended her husband’s legacy and said the family had no knowledge of new claims, also called for an end to what she called “this endless process of character assassination by accusation.”

Lokman declined to answer questions about what steps the university took to verify abuse claims during the settlement process, or about what it had done to investigate the new allegations that Paterno and members of his coaching staff knew about Sandusky’s abuse decades before his 2011 arrest.

The university hired settlement experts Kenneth Feinberg and Michael Rozen to handle the claims. Feinberg declined comment. Rozen did not respond to an email from the AP.

In 2001, Paterno told high-ranking university officials one of his assistant coaches reported seeing Sandusky acting inappropriately with a child in a team shower. In 2011, Paterno told a grand jury he did not know of any other incidents involving Sandusky, who retired from Penn State in 1999.

Paterno was fired following Sandusky’s November 2011 arrest and died of lung cancer in January 2012. He was not charged with any crime, and his family is pursuing a lawsuit against the NCAA for commercial disparagement.

Three university officials, including former President Graham Spanier, await trial on criminal charges for their handling of the Sandusky scandal.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2016/06/10/judge-paterno-sandusky-abuse-1976/

Judge To Release Records With Claim Joe Paterno Told Of Jerry Sandusky Abuse In 1976
June 10, 2016 10:06 PM

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A Philadelphia judge has ordered the public release of sealed documents from a lawsuit that could reveal details about a claim that a boy told Penn State football coach Joe Paterno in 1976 that Jerry Sandusky had molested him.

Judge Gary Glazer said Thursday that the records will be made public in a month, granting the request for access to the filings made by The Associated Press and other news outlets.

Glazer disclosed the Paterno-related claim last month when he ruled in a dispute between Penn State and its insurer over payments to those with claims of abuse by former Paterno assistant Sandusky.

He also wrote that the insurer, Pennsylvania Manufacturers’ Association Insurance Co., had evidence one assistant coach saw “inappropriate contact” between Sandusky and a child at the university in 1987 and a second “reportedly witnessed sexual contact” between Sandusky and a child the next year.

Penn State said Friday it was pleased that Glazer would protect the alleged victims’ privacy and confidentiality. The judge said their names and any other identifying information will be blacked out.

The decision was issued hours after Glazer presided over a hearing during which Penn State’s lawyer argued victims should be spared any further trauma and embarrassment and urged the judge to meet with them before deciding to unseal the documents.

“Under the state and federal constitutions and the common law, the public’s right of access to civil court records, and the public’s continued concern regarding the unfortunate events underlying this coverage action, weigh heavily in favor of unsealing the record,” Glazer wrote.

The records set for release include expert reports that evaluate the reasonableness of the settlements and analyze the insurer’s potential responsibility.

Paterno said before he died of lung cancer in 2012 that the first time he received a complaint against Sandusky was in 2001.

Penn State president Eric Barron said last month the accusations regarding Paterno were unsubstantiated and the school had no evidence to support what he called “a claim by an alleged victim.”

Penn State has confirmed paying $92 million to settle 32 civil claims of abuse at Sandusky’s hands, going back to 1971.

Sandusky maintains his innocence and is appealing a 45-count conviction for abuse of 10 boys.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...-Hearing-Sex-Abuse-Convictions-383324651.html

Sandusky Granted Appeal Hearing for Sex Abuse Conviction
By Mark Scolforo

A judge on Thursday ordered hearings to let former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky develop more information as he tries to overturn his child molestation conviction.

Judge John Cleland said the three days of proceedings in August will address, in part, whether defense lawyers should have called Sandusky to testify and whether prosecutors improperly leaked information about the grand jury investigation.

The hearing also will delve into whether prosecutor Joe McGettigan lied during closing arguments at Sandusky's 2012 trial when he said he did not know the identity of a figure referred to as Victim 2.

"The question is what Mr. McGettigan believed to be true when he made the statement to the jury,'' Cleland said.

Sandusky, 72, is serving a 30- to 60-year sentence for 45 counts of child sexual abuse covering 10 victims.

Eight young men testified they had suffered abuse at Sandusky's hands. The two others were Victim 2, who assistant coach Mike McQueary testified he saw being abused by Sandusky in team shower in 2001, and a boy who was reportedly seen by a custodian with Sandusky in the locker room.

Also at issue on appeal are decisions by Sandusky's lawyers to let him do an television interview with NBC's Bob Costas soon after his arrest, to waive his preliminary hearing and to not use grand jury testimony by three Penn State administrators.

A spokesman for the attorney general's office said prosecutors feel strongly that Sandusky's appeal is meritless and they plan to challenge the claims vigorously. A message seeking comment from Sandusky's appellate lawyer, Al Lindsay, was not immediately returned.

Cumberland County prosecutor Dave Freed, speaking for the state district attorneys' association, said complicated cases sometimes generate multi-day post-conviction appeals hearings.

"This order seems to me very much in keeping with the way Judge Cleland conducts business, which is he lays out very clearly what he expects, how he expects the hearing to go, allows sufficient time for it and allows the parties to prepare so he can use court time efficiently,'' Freed said.

Sandusky previously lost direct appeals to the state's Supreme and Superior courts. He is now pursuing claims under the state's Post-Conviction Relief Act, which is confined to newly discovered evidence, constitutional violations and ineffective lawyering.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...ts-Federal-Tax-Evasion-Charges-386084751.html

Jerry Sandusky's Ex-Lawyer Admits Federal Tax Evasion Charges
Published at 8:39 PM EDT on Jul 8, 2016

Jerry-Sandusky-Karl-Rominger.jpg

Jerry Sandusky with attorney Karl Rominger during his trial in Bellefonte, Pa.


A lawyer who represented former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky at his child sex abuse trial has pleaded guilty under a deal with federal prosecutors to charges he attempted to evade federal income taxes from 2006 to 2010.

A Harrisburg federal judge on Thursday accepted Karl Rominger's guilty pleas to tax evasion and failing to file federal tax return charges.

Rominger faces up to six years in prison at his sentencing, which hasn't been scheduled.

One Rominger's lawyers says the guilty pleas are a step toward him acknowledging the ``harm'' he's caused.

Rominger also pleaded guilty in May to stealing $767,000 in client funds and spending it on gambling and other interests. Sentencing in that case is set for August.

Sandusky is appealing a lengthy child molestation sentence.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...terno-Jerry-Sandusky-Sex-Abuse-386438411.html

When Did Penn State Legend Joe Paterno Know of Abuse Claims Against Jerry Sandusky?
Records could reveal more of claim boy told Paterno of abuse decades ago
Published 3 hours ago

Barring a last-minute appeal, a Philadelphia judge is poised to unseal documents from an insurance lawsuit that could shed new light on allegations a boy told Penn State coach Joe Paterno in 1976 that assistant coach Jerry Sandusky molested him.

Judge Gary Glazer is expected to release records Tuesday that also may contain details about claims Penn State assistant coaches saw "inappropriate contact" and "sexual contact" between Sandusky and a child in 1987 and 1988.

Sandusky's lawyer has denied the allegations. Sandusky is serving 30 to 60 years on a 45-count child molestation conviction.

Before Paterno died in 2011, he told a newspaper the first inkling he had that Sandusky was abusing children came in 2001, when assistant coach Mike McQueary complained about Sandusky in a team shower with a boy. :rolleyes:
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...veal-more-of-claim-boy-told-paterno-of-abuse/

Records Unsealed: Could Reveal More Of Claim Boy Told Paterno Of Abuse
July 12, 2016 8:34 AM By Paul Kurtz
by Paul Kurtz

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — The Penn State sexual abuse scandal has been reignited with an explosive accusation that was made two years ago and became public knowledge Tuesday.

Joe Paterno apparently knew that Jerry Sandusky was sexually abusing underage boys as early as 1976.

A man identified as John Doe 150 testified in a deposition that he was molested by Sandusky in a shower during a football camp he attended when he was 14.

The alleged victim first complained to some Penn State players, who said and did nothing. So the next day he approached Paterno and told him the story.

Paterno’s reaction: “I don’t have time to hear about any of that stuff. I have a football season to worry about.” :mad:

Civil attorney Tom Kline, who represented one of Sandusky’s ten victims, says that accusation and others will open a whole new can of worms.

“The depositions appear to suggest that there was knowledge by Mr. Paterno going back a significant period of time earlier than the 1998 period which was conventional at the time that Mr. Sandusky was prosecuted,” said Kline. “There was a feeling when the first case settled in which I represented a young man who was known as victim number 5 that Penn State would somehow put this matter behind them. Instead it has festered long and it has languished.”

Sandusky was convicted four years ago. The depositions are part of a court battle over Penn State and its insurance company, which refused to reimburse the university for the $60+ million it paid out to Sandusky’s victims.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Penn-State-Jerry-Sandusky-Defense-Coaches-387185801.html

Coaches at Penn State Who Worked With Sandusky Find Selves on Defense
By Mark Scolforo and Michael R. Sisak
Published 2 hours ago

Newly disclosed allegations from men who have accused Jerry Sandusky of sexual abuse raise fresh questions about what his fellow Penn State assistant coaches might have seen or known in the decades before his November 2011 arrest, and why they've largely stayed silent since.

Sandusky's former colleagues found themselves on the defensive this week because of claims in court documents that some of the couple of dozen assistants who spent time in the program while he was there may have witnessed Sandusky abusing children as far back as the 1980s.

Aside from blanket denials made through lawyers and spokespeople, the former assistants who worked alongside Sandusky have said little publicly about the scandal.

"These guys are very sensitive to their employment. It's not easy to go out and replace a half-million-dollar income," said Penn State Trustee Anthony Lubrano, who is close with the family of the late head football coach Joe Paterno. "I get why they're not standing in front of a microphone screaming from the top of their lungs."

Three of the four coaches named in newly released depositions given by men who reached settlements with Penn State made statements this week denying claims that they witnessed or were aware of Sandusky's abuse. The fourth coach, Joe Sarra, died four years ago.

The Paterno family's lawyer issued a statement last week casting doubt on a bombshell claim in the documents that a boy told Paterno in 1976 that Sandusky had abused him and that Paterno didn't want to hear about it.

Paterno told a grand jury in 2011 he first learned of Sandusky's conduct in 2001, when then-assistant coach Mike McQueary went to him after seeing Sandusky assaulting a boy in a team shower.

Sandusky coached for Paterno for three decades starting in 1969, leading staunch defenses that helped win two national titles in the 1980s.

He founded a charity for at-risk children in 1977 and was often seen around the football facility with young boys, sometimes taking them on the road to big games. Even after his 1999 retirement, Sandusky kept an office on campus and had access to a staff locker room.

"When we saw the pictures of those kids on the sidelines at bowl games — I know it was hindsight, but it looked odd," said Duquesne Law professor Wes Oliver, who has followed the case closely. "The assistant coaches saw all that and more."

But, Oliver added: "Suspicious behavior is, of course, one thing. Actual acts are something else. One could imagine a natural reluctance to speak out about merely suspicious behavior."

Sandusky is serving 30 to 60 years in prison for his conviction on 45 counts of sexual abuse.

His 2012 trial covered abuse dating to the mid-1990s, but Penn State has acknowledged it later settled with a man who said he was abused in 1971. That man is among 32 people who have shared $92 million in civil settlements from the university.

McQueary, a key prosecution witness at Sandusky's trial, gave a deposition last year in which he claimed former assistant coach Tom Bradley "said he knew of some things" about Sandusky dating to the early 1980s.

McQueary, who is pursuing a defamation and whistleblower lawsuit against Penn State, said Bradley told him former assistant coach Greg Schiano went to him in the early 1990s "white as a ghost and said he just saw Jerry doing something to a boy in the shower."

A lawyer for Bradley, now UCLA's defensive coordinator, said he never witnessed any inappropriate behavior, and has no knowledge of alleged incidents in the 1980s and 1990s.

The lawyer, Brett Senior, declined to answer questions, saying "this thing's gone on too long" and "it's all been asked and answered."

Schiano, now Ohio State's defensive coordinator, tweeted that he never saw abuse or had any reason to suspect it while working at Penn State.

Lawyer Tom Kline, whose client testified against Sandusky and later settled with Penn State, encouraged former coaches to "come forward and clear the air."

"The passage of time can be convenient for a claim of a failed recollection, but the things that we're talking about are not things which escape the recollection, even over decades," Kline said.

One former assistant coach who has spoken up since Sandusky's arrest said coaches sometimes showered alongside Sandusky and boys.

Dick Anderson, who also played with Sandusky at Penn State in the 1960s, testified at his trial that "on occasion, over the years" he would see Sandusky showering with boys.

Jay Paterno, the coach's son who also was on the Penn State coaching staff, wrote in a column this week that the coaches have been forthcoming in statements to police, lawyers in civil cases and reporters, as well as for the university-commissioned Freeh report.

"Coaches turned over cellphones, email accounts, computers and iPads, and what did they find to reveal some vast conspiracy spanning decades?" he wrote. "Nothing." :rolleyes:
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...dusky-will-testify-friday-in-appeals-hearing/

Lawyer Says Sandusky Will Testify Friday In Appeals Hearing
August 11, 2016 6:38 PM

BELLEFONTE, Pa. (AP) — Jerry Sandusky’s lawyer says the former Penn State assistant football coach will testify during an upcoming appeals hearing about whether he was improperly convicted four years ago.

Sandusky attorney Al Lindsay said Thursday he expects Sandusky to testify at length in the three-day Post-Conviction Relief Act hearing that gets underway Friday in a Pennsylvania courthouse.

The 72-year-old Sandusky didn’t take the stand during his 2012 trial, a decision that’s among the issues he’s raised in arguing his lawyers didn’t represent him adequately.

Sandusky was convicted of sexually abusing 10 boys and sentenced to decades in state prison. Eight victims testified against him.

The three-day appeals hearing in the Centre County Courthouse near State College will continue on Aug. 22.

Sandusky previously lost direct appeals to state Superior and Supreme courts.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...nies-sexual-abuse-of-boys-at-appeals-hearing/

Sandusky Forcefully Denies Sexual Abuse Of Boys At Appeals Hearing
August 12, 2016 1:45 PM

BELLEFONTE, Pa. (AP) — Jerry Sandusky took the stand Friday to forcefully deny the child molestation charges he was convicted of four years ago and said it wasn’t his idea to waive his right to testify during his 2012 trial.

The former Penn State assistant football coach testified for an hour during an appeals hearing in which he’s hoping to have his 45-count conviction thrown out or get a new trial. The 72-year-old argued during a hearing scheduled to last for three days that he wasn’t properly represented by his legal team.

On Friday, he told the court that he learned he’d be doing an NBC TV interview just minutes before it occurred and that his defense lawyer strongly advised him against taking the stand to reject claims that he had molested boys.

He also denied Friday that he’d ever had oral or anal sex with anyone and found the thought disgusting. :huh:

Although he didn’t testify at trial, Sandusky did speak during his sentencing, denying he committed “these alleged disgusting acts” and hoping that “something good will come out of this.” :rolleyes:

“I’ve forgiven; I’ve been forgiven,” he said at sentencing. “I’ve comforted others; I’ve been comforted. I’ve been kissed by dogs; I’ve been bit by dogs. I’ve conformed; I’ve also been different. I’ve been me. I’ve been loved; I’ve been hated.”

He testified by video link during a January 2014 hearing about his ultimately successful effort to have his $4,900-a-month pension reinstated. :mad:

In a filing this week, his attorneys said Sandusky would describe conversations with his lawyers concerning the identity of the young man called Victim 2 in court records and about allegations of abuse made at the time of trial — but outside court — by his adopted son Matt Sandusky.

Sandusky, his lawyers wrote, “will testify regarding each accuser and deny that he committed the crimes alleged.”

Eight young men testified at trial that they were abused as children by Sandusky, who spent decades at Penn State under head coach Joe Paterno before his retirement in 1999.

Sandusky founded a charity for at-risk children where prosecutors say he recruited victims.

“Mr. Sandusky will submit that he did not start The Second Mile in order to groom victims,” his lawyers wrote. “He will testify regarding how often the accusers would stay at his home and if they stayed with other children.”

A spokesman for the attorney general’s office said prosecutors consider Sandusky’s post-conviction claims to be meritless and are ready for his testimony.

Sandusky previously lost direct appeals to the state’s Supreme and Superior courts. The Friday hearing falls under the state’s Post-Conviction Relief Act and is confined to newly discovered evidence, constitutional violations and ineffective lawyering.

The hearing is expected to continue on Aug. 22 and Aug. 23. If Sandusky is successful, his charges could be dismissed, but that’s less likely than the chance the judge could order a new trial.

Sandusky is serving 30 to 60 years in Greene State Prison, where he’s been largely segregated from the prison’s general population out of concerns for his safety.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...ower-Suit-Jerry-Sandusky-Abuse-390292711.html

Judge Sets Trial Date for Ex-Penn State Assistant Football Coach's Whistleblower Lawsuit
By Associated Press
Published 30 minutes ago

paterno-mcqueary.jpg

Former Penn State assistant football coach Mike McQueary, second from right, arrives at the Pasquerilla Spiritual Center on the Penn State campus for memorial services for former Penn State coach Joe Paterno Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012 in State College, Pa. Paterno died Sunday morning. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)


A judge has set an Oct. 17 trial date for the whistleblower lawsuit filed by former Penn State assistant football coach Mike McQueary.

McQueary was placed on leave by Penn State in 2011 following revelations he reported alleged on-campus sex abuse of a boy by Jerry Sandusky, the university's retired defensive coordinator. :mad: Sandusky is serving decades in prison for child-sex convictions.

McQueary's lawsuit contends his coaching career and personal life have been harmed since he reported the Sandusky allegation.

Penn State officials sought to delay the trial until the criminal charges are resolved that accuse former administrators Graham Spanier, Tim Curley and Gary Schultz of covering up abuse allegations.

But Centre County Judge Thomas Gavin on Monday ordered McQueary's suit to be heard citing the "ongoing economic harm" he's suffering.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2016/08/22/jerry-sandusky-back-in-court/

Jerry Sandusky Back In Court, Trying To Get Conviction Overturned
August 22, 2016 8:20 AM

BELLEFONTE, Pa. (CBS) –– Convicted child molester Jerry Sandusky will be back in court today.

The former Penn State coach is trying to get his conviction overturned.

READ: Sandusky Forcefully Denies Sexual Abuse Of Boys At Appeals Hearing

He says his lawyer was ineffective.

Sandusky is currently serving a 30 to 60 year sentence for sexually abusing 10 different boys between 1994 and 2008.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2016/08/22/jerry-sandusky-back-in-court/

Sandusky Appeal Focuses On Victim 2’s Conflicting Statements
August 22, 2016 8:20 AM

BELLEFONTE, Pa. (AP) –– Jerry Sandusky’s lawyers are focusing on conflicting statements from a man who settled a child sex abuse claim with Penn State but didn’t testify at Sandusky’s criminal trial.

The second day of an appeal hearing for the former defensive coach on Monday included testimony from a lawyer who represents the man who says he is Victim 2 and was seen being abused by Sandusky in a shower.

Victim 2 and one other victim didn’t testify during the 2012 trial, while eight others did.

Attorney Andrew Shubin says he believes his client is Victim 2 but won’t say whether he ever tried to hide the man’s whereabouts from prosecutors or investigators.

Retired Cpl. Joseph Leiter says that shortly before Sandusky was arrested, the man denied to him that Sandusky abused him.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...lead-to-new-trial-or-his-release-from-prison/

Sandusky Appeal Could Lead To New Trial Or His Release From Prison
August 23, 2016 8:49 AM

BELLEFONTE, Pa. (CBS) – Former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky is heading back to court today as his legal team lobbies for a new trial.

Sandusky’s attorneys are expected to question the prosecutors who helped convict him in 2012.

Yesterday’s testimony focused on only one issue, whether the state in 2012 knew who victim number 2 was.

That is the person assistant Penn State coach Mike McQueary says he saw Sandusky sexually abuse in 2001.

Attorney Tom Kline, who represented victim number 5, said there is a very remote possibility Sandusky could be released from prison if he awaits a new trial.

“I can say this categorically on behalf of all of those victims of whom I got to know, and one young man who I got to know and love and respect as my client, they would be devastated to see Jerry Sandusky somehow released from jail and somehow walking the streets again.”

Kline continued, “When he did these horrible deeds, he had a fair trial and was convicted.”

Sandusky was convicted in June 2012 of sexually abusing 10 different boys between 1994 and 2008.
 
Back
Top