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Jerry Sandusky Arrested: Ex-Penn State Coach, Athletic Director Tim Curley Charged In Child Sex Case

GENARO C. ARMAS and MARK SCOLFORO   11/ 5/11 11:15 PM ET   AP

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — An explosive sex abuse scandal and possible cover-up rocked "Happy Valley" on Saturday when former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky, once considered Joe Paterno's heir apparent, was charged with sexually assaulting eight boys over a 15-year period. Among the allegations was a 2002 incident in which a graduate assistant for the team said he saw Sandusky assault a boy in the shower at the Nittany Lions' practice center.

Sandusky retired in 1999 but continued to use the school's facilities for his work with The Second Mile, a foundation he established to help at-risk kids. The state grand jury investigation also resulted in perjury charges against Tim Curley, Penn State's athletic director, and Gary Schultz, vice president for finance and business. The two administrators were accused of failing to alert police – as required by state law – of their investigation of the allegations.

"This is a case about a sexual predator who used his position within the university and community to repeatedly prey on young boys," Pennsylvania Attorney General Linda Kelly said in a statement.

Paterno, who last week became the winningest coach in Division I football, was not charged, and the grand jury report did not appear to implicate him in wrongdoing.

Under Paterno's four-decades-and-counting stewardship, the Nittany Lions became a bedrock in the college game and fans packed the stadium in State College, a campus town routinely ranked among America's best places to live and nicknamed "Happy Valley." Paterno's teams were revered both for winning games – including two national championships – and largely steering clear of trouble. Sandusky, whose defenses were usually anchored by tough-guy linebackers – hence the moniker, "Linebacker U" – spent three decades at the school. The charges against him cover the period between 1994 and 2009.

Sandusky, 67, was arrested Saturday and released on $100,000 bail after being arraigned on 40 criminal counts. Curley, 57, and Schultz, 62, were expected to turn themselves in on Monday in Harrisburg.

The allegations against Sandusky, who started The Second Mile in 1977, range from sexual advances to touching to oral and anal sex. The young men testified before a state grand jury that they were in their early teens when some of the abuse occurred; there is evidence even younger children may have been victimized. Defense attorney Joe Amendola said Sandusky has been aware of the accusations for about three years and has maintained his innocence.

"He's shaky, as you can expect," Amendola told WJAC-TV after Sandusky was arraigned. "Being 67 years old, never having faced criminal charges in his life, and having the distinguished career that he's had, these are very serious allegations."

A preliminary hearing scheduled for Wednesday would likely be delayed, Amendola said. Sandusky is charged with multiple counts of involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, corruption of minors, endangering the welfare of a child, indecent assault and unlawful contact with a minor, as well as single counts of aggravated indecent assault and attempted indecent assault.

No one answered a knock at the door Saturday at Sandusky's modest, two-story brick home at the end of a dead-end road in State College. A man who answered the door at The Second Mile office in State College declined to give his name and said the organization had no comment.

The grand jury said eight boys were targets of sexual advances or assaults by Sandusky. None was named, and in at least one case, the jury said the child's identity remains unknown to authorities.

One accuser, now 27, testified that Sandusky initiated contact with a "soap battle" in the shower that led to multiple instances of involuntary sexual intercourse and indecent assault at Sandusky's hands, the grand jury report said.

He said he traveled to charity functions and Penn State games with Sandusky, even being listed as a member of the Sandusky family party for the 1998 Outback Bowl and 1999 Alamo Bowl. But when the boy resisted his advances, Sandusky threatened to send him home from the Alamo Bowl, the report said.

Sandusky also gave him clothes, shoes, a snowboard, golf clubs, hockey gear and football jerseys, and even guaranteed that he could walk on to the football team, the grand jury said, and the boy also appeared with Sandusky in a photo in Sports Illustrated. He testified that Sandusky once gave him $50 to buy marijuana, drove him to purchase it and then drove him home as the boy smoked the drug.

The first case to come to light was a boy who met Sandusky when he was 11 or 12, the grand jury said. The boy received expensive gifts and trips to sports events from Sandusky, and physical contact began during his overnight stays at Sandusky's home, jurors said. Eventually, the boy's mother reported the allegations of sexual assault to his high school, and Sandusky was banned from the child's school district in Clinton County in 2009. That triggered the state investigation that culminated in charges Saturday.

But the report also alleges much earlier instances of abuse, and details failed efforts to stop it by some who became aware of what was happening.

Another child, known only as a boy about 11 to 13, was seen by a janitor pinned against a wall while Sandusky performed oral sex on him in fall 2000, the grand jury said.

And in 2002, Kelly said, a graduate assistant saw Sandusky sexually assault a naked boy, estimated to be about 10 years old, in a team locker room shower. The grad student and his father reported what he saw to Paterno, who immediately told Curley, prosecutors said.

Curley and Schultz met with the graduate assistant about a week and a half later, Kelly said.

"Despite a powerful eyewitness statement about the sexual assault of a child, this incident was not reported to any law enforcement or child protective agency, as required by Pennsylvania law," Kelly said.

There's no indication that anyone at school attempted to find the boy, or follow up with the witness, she said.

Curley denied that the assistant had reported anything of a sexual nature, calling it "merely `horsing around,'" the 23-page grand jury report said. But he also testified that he barred Sandusky from bringing children onto campus and that he advised Penn State president Graham Spanier of the matter.

The grand jury said Curley was lying, Kelly said, adding that it also deemed portions of Schultz's testimony not to be credible.

Schultz told the jurors he also knew of a 1998 investigation involving sexually inappropriate behavior by Sandusky with a boy in the showers the football team used.

But despite his job overseeing campus police, he never reported the 2002 allegations to any authorities, "never sought or received a police report on the 1998 incident and never attempted to learn the identity of the child in the shower in 2002," the jurors wrote. "No one from the university did so."

Lawyers for both Curley and Schultz issued statements saying they are innocent of all charges.

In response to a request for comment from Paterno, a spokesman for the athletic department said all such questions would be referred to university representatives, who released a statement from Spanier calling the allegations against Sandusky "troubling" and adding Curley and Schultz had his unconditional support.

He predicted they will be exonerated.

"I have known and worked daily with Tim and Gary for more than 16 years," Spanier said. "I have complete confidence in how they handled the allegations about a former university employee."

Sandusky, once considered a potential successor to Paterno, drew up the defenses for the Nittany Lions' national-title teams in 1982 and 1986. The team is enjoying another successful run this season; at 8-1, Penn State is ranked No. 16 in the AP Top 25 and is the last undefeated squad in Big Ten play. The Nittany Lions were off Saturday.

As the head football coach, Paterno has spent years cultivating a reputation for putting integrity ahead of modern college-sports economics. It's a notion that has benefited Penn State's marketing and recruiting efforts over the decades and one that the Big Ten school's alumni proudly tout years after they leave.

"We're supposed to be one of the universities to follow after, someone to look up to," said sophomore Brian Prewitt of Poughkeepsie, N.Y. "Now that people on the top are involved, it's going to be bad."

___

Scolforo reported from Harrisburg.

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STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — An explosive sex abuse scandal and possible cover-up rocked "Happy Valley" on Saturday when former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky, once considered Joe Pater...
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — An explosive sex abuse scandal and possible cover-up rocked "Happy Valley" on Saturday when former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky, once considered Joe Pater...
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04:43 PM on 11/15/2011
Frankly, I feel sorry for Sandusky.
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one1byke
Easy no Man.
01:33 PM on 11/13/2011
The coach who testified, Mike McQueary, had said he saw retired Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky sexually assaulting a boy in a shower at a campus football facility almost a decade ago.

"McQueary told the grand jury he was distraught by what he witnessed and walked away after both Sandusky and the boy saw him."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Demarcus Jackson
Southern Psychology Professor
10:45 PM on 11/11/2011
I just read the grand jury report: http://kstp.com/article/stories/S2367503.shtml?cat=1

OMGosh! Crazy!
09:13 PM on 11/11/2011
Sandusky's out on bail. Amazing! His bail of $100,000 is not actually all that high considering there are 40 criminal counts against him. He's such a pillar in the community, founder of a charity for at-risk boys and all. I suppose the judge doesn't consider him a flight risk.

This is what I'm wondering though, the DA who began an investigation around 2000, refused to file charges against Sandusky (so they say) but disappeared just the same in 2005 - who isn't mentioned in the article above--- are the authorities even trying to find out what happened to him? One article said his car was located, and his laptop was found in some body of water similar to a lake; his body has never been found; yet, he was declared dead this past July.

I wonder if any more people connected to this case will disappear. It sounds like one of those cases where people began to vanish from sight right before one's very eyes.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MSMSucksCom
Sadly, my bio fits in this space.
08:45 PM on 11/11/2011
For those of you who cannot fathom how bad this is, I suggest you reenact Sandusky's acts in the privacy of your bathroom (that's kind of like the shower room at Penn State), complete with props (use your imagination). Close your eyes and imagine you are eight to ten years old, again, and also imagine that the person sodomizing you is someone you respect and admire.

While you are reenacting things in the privacy of your bathroom, also imagine that there's no one you can tell about being raped because no one is going to believe you, that a person loved, admired and respected would do such a thing.

In my situation I was adopted by parents where my adopted father's motivational method included beating me with a cowboy belt, his fists or heel of a hard rubber shoe heel. If I came home and told him "The asst. coach at Penn State did bad things to me in the shower at the college" he would first ask what I was talking about, then on hearing details he would have beat me to the floor.

I really wish those supporting Penn State, JoePa and "the game" could understand how evil this entire situation is.

Update: I just talked to a friend who works at a Los Angeles law firm. She said one of the lawyers wore a Penn State hoodie to work today, in support of JoePa and in protest to how Penn State is handling the rape cases.
09:27 PM on 11/11/2011
One of the attorneys wore a Penn State hoodie in support of Joe Paterno, hunh? How gallant! An attorney at that - this case is bigger than all of us - isn't it?

What will it take for some people to get it? All I can really conclude from the type of behavior you describe is that those boys just don't count to some people. That is why this cover-up has continued for so many years. Those at-risk kids simply aren't important in the minds of those who support Joe-Penn-State and "the game."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MSMSucksCom
Sadly, my bio fits in this space.
08:37 PM on 11/11/2011
As a victim of sexual crimes in an orphanage until age six and physical abuse by my adopted parents (beating with belts, fists and shoe heels) I would like to thank HuffPo, people in here and elsewhere on the Net for supporting my situation and your expressions of disgust, anger and calls for justice on anyone directly or indirectly involved in the Penn State situation.

I in particular would like to thank HuffPo for not censoring my posts.
10:18 AM on 11/14/2011
Thank you for sharing. It does help to bring a heighten awareness to this deplorable crime and the victimization of innocent children.
07:25 PM on 11/11/2011
I think Jerry will get his come comeuppance for what he did to his kids. I've heard prison inmates have a special code for dealing with child predators.
05:36 PM on 11/11/2011
Huff Po, why does this reporter sound so peppy here? Ugh, her 'cheerleaderish' tone is so wrong for this story.

And the little Christmasy ad before it...does anyone in the media have any gravitas at all? This story is a horror, let's really be mindful when reporting it.
05:02 PM on 11/11/2011
Something else difficult to fathom is that Jerry Sandusky founded the Second Mile in 1977 and didn't begin molesting boys until the 1990's. I'll wager he's been molesting young boys all along. I hope that those boys will likewise come forward. I understand the shame and guilt some of them may feel. But, I hope that doesn't stop them from coming forward, that they will come to realize they were mere children, unable to defend themselves and that they did nothing wrong.
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Neets101
politely asking for mod squad approval
02:22 PM on 11/11/2011
The church.
The boy scouts.
And now this.

And people bad mouth the kids playing video games.
04:53 PM on 11/11/2011
I agree at least you know they are home, safe right?
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Neets101
politely asking for mod squad approval
04:55 PM on 11/11/2011
Exactly.
liltrix
My micro-bio has a mind of it's own.
07:15 PM on 11/11/2011
Oh yes, safe and getting mind f*cked by violent video games and dulling their minds with television. Come on people, we can do better than both of these.
02:19 PM on 11/11/2011
I think everyone involved, witnesses who knew and the digusting, perverted child predater, Sandusky, should be thrown in prison. For these monsters to be in a position of athourity and to speak so much about integrity and holding yourself to much higher moral standards is bulls***. These children trusted these men and they were taken advantage of and were let down by the creeps who did not do more to protect them. To witness these unspeakable acts and do nothing is unacceptale and is unimaginablely moraly wrong. It makes me wonder what else is being hidden and who else is being protected by a**holes. No coach, no person is that imporatant to a team, that these kind of acts should be covered up or just ingnored. I mean if Sandusky had shot a child instead would that be important enough to go to the police about or is the game of football and the number of championships more importan?!!!!!!. Who is going to protect our children?!!!!!
01:54 PM on 11/11/2011
It’s clear from Sandusky’s activities that he founded the Second Mile organization for the chief purpose of gaining access to boys-vulnerable boys-boys he could pretend he was “saving”—make them feel ungrateful if they rejected his advances.

I almost don’t know what to make of the officials at the school aware of Sandusky’s behavior, classifying it as, “not all that serious.” What was their rationale? Did they feel that because the boys were at-risk children, it “wasn’t all that serious”? Did they consider the boys as “nobody”—“unimportant”?

What about Sandusky’s wife? The grand jury indictment states that all of the victims were invited to overnights at Sandusky’s home, at some juncture, and slept in a basement bedroom. Sandusky always made his appearance during the night. Didn’t his wife notice a pattern? Did she ever wonder why he was leaving their bedroom during the night when everyone was supposed to be asleep? How well did she actually know the man she slept next to each night? How was he able to hide what he was all those years—even fooling his own wife? Or, was she fooled?

And, how many other Sandusky’s are out there operating under the radar? How many more predators are preying upon at-risk children in the name of some higher cause? Those kids are already experiencing the very worst life can offer, and then they have to cross paths with a Sandusky—ironic that his name is nearly homonymous with dis-gust-ing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bor Zoi
06:17 AM on 11/11/2011
Jerry:
When you get to prison, you won't need a coin flip.
You'll know what end you'll be defending.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
noodles865
Marco......
03:23 AM on 11/11/2011
what is amazing to me about this article is that the big wig who commented none said how heartbreaking and damaging this must be for those kids all anyone said was how great everyone was at their jobs giving a great thumbs up on all this wads handled none showed regret and or a thought of how they could have better handled this.no regard for those kids just watching out for their jobs and the reputation of penn.pathetic men you are pathetic!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ogsrun
02:00 PM on 11/10/2011
Great evil is achieved when good men do nothing. Just hope that none of those "Good Men" who did nothing didn't have at-risk children at home. Then it would have been a different story told.