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Penn State Scandal: 1st Sex-Abuse Lawsuit Filed Against Jerry Sandusky Comes From New Accuser

MARYCLAIRE DALE   11/30/11 10:34 PM ET   AP

PHILADELPHIA — Former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky sexually abused a boy more than 100 times and threatened to harm his family to keep him quiet, according to a lawsuit filed Wednesday by a new accuser who is not part of the criminal case.

The 29-year-old, identified only as John Doe, had never told anyone about the abuse he claims he suffered until Sandusky was charged this month with abusing other boys. His lawyer said he filed a complaint with law enforcement on Tuesday. He became the first plaintiff to file suit in the Penn State child sex abuse scandal a day later.

Sandusky has acknowledged that he showered with boys but denied molesting them. His lawyer did not immediately return a message about the lawsuit.

The lawsuit claims Sandusky abused the boy from 1992, when the boy was 10, until 1996 in encounters at the coach's State College home, in a Penn State locker room and on trips, including to a bowl game. The account echoes a grand jury's description of trips, gifts and attention lavished on other boys.

"I am hurting and have been for a long time because of what happened, but feel now even more tormented that I have learned of so many other kids were abused after me," the plaintiff said in a handwritten statement his lawyer read aloud at a news conference.

The lawsuit seeks tens of thousands of dollars and names Sandusky, the university and Sandusky's The Second Mile charity as defendants. The man says he knew the coach through the charity, which Sandusky founded in 1977, ostensibly to help disadvantaged children in central Pennsylvania.

The man was not referenced in the grand jury report that charges Sandusky with abusing eight boys over a 15-year period.

His lawyer, Jeff Anderson, said he believes Sandusky was a predator who could not control his sexual impulses toward children. He harshly criticized officials at Penn State and The Second Mile who failed to report their suspicions and put a stop to any abuse.

"We need to address the institutional recklessness and failures," said Anderson, who specializes in clergy sex abuse lawsuits. "Was it because of power, money, fear, loyalty, lack of education?"

The university said it had not seen the complaint.

The charity said it would respond after reviewing the lawsuit but added: "The Second Mile will adhere to its legal responsibilities throughout this process. As always, our thoughts and prayers are with the victims and their families."

Anderson suggested that it ended four years later because Sandusky was not sexually interested in older teens.

The lawsuit was filed hours before students and high-ranking administrators participated in a town hall forum organized by students at Penn State's main campus in State College.

Penn State president Rod Erickson promised the university would raise the visibility of ethics "to a new level" following the scandal, which has rocked the campus.

"So hopefully everyone in the university understands ... we learn to do the right thing the first time, every time," Erickson said in opening remarks before an audience of about 450 students and employees at an auditorium in the student union.

Students said the forum, which was broadcast on the school's public television station, will help in the healing process.

Sandusky was charged on Nov. 5 with abusing eight boys, some on campus. A grand jury said the allegations were not immediately brought to the attention of authorities even though high-level people at Penn State apparently knew about at least one of them.

The scandal has resulted in the departures of school President Graham Spanier and longtime coach Joe Paterno. Athletic Director Tim Curley has been placed on administrative leave, and Vice President Gary Schultz, who was in charge of the university's police department, has stepped down.

Schultz and Curley are charged with lying to the grand jury and failure to report to police, and Sandusky is charged with child sex abuse. All maintain their innocence.

In the lawsuit, the plaintiff said Sandusky gave him gifts, travel and privileges after meeting him through his charity in 1992. The abuse began shortly afterward, the suit said.

Anderson described Penn State and the charity as entwined institutions, and he charged that both failed to ensure that children were safe when they took part in trips and activities. He declined to say which bowl game the boy attended.

Sandusky took one boy he molested to the Alamo Bowl in Texas in 1999 and threatened to send him home when he resisted his advances, the grand jury said.

The bowl proved to be Sandusky's last game as Penn State's defensive coordinator. Once Paterno's heir apparent, Sandusky left after Paterno told him he would not get the head coaching job.

John Doe's lawsuit seeks a minimum of $400,000 in damages for sexual abuse, negligence, emotional distress and other claims. The accuser long thought he was the only victim and was mired in guilt and self-loathing, the lawyer said.

"Now that I have done something about it, I am feeling better and going to get help and work with the police," the accuser wrote in his statement.

Anderson declined to specify what sexual acts his client says took place, but he called them "severe." Nor would he say which police agency his client contacted Tuesday.

Police in Philadelphia and State College said they were not aware of such a complaint. The attorney general's office, which led the grand jury investigation, and state police said they could not disclose if a report was filed.

A university spokeswoman said police have received two complaints since Sandusky's arrest, the most recent from a prison inmate in Oklahoma, and both have been turned over to the attorney general's office. Anderson said his client John Doe is not that Oklahoma inmate.

By Anderson's count, the grand jury report lists 17 adults made aware of complaints or suspicions about the coach over the years, including those who knew of a 1998 complaint that Sandusky had showered with a Second Mile boy. Police pursued that mother's complaint and compiled more than 100 pages of investigatory notes, but no charges were filed.

Had John Doe known about that, he might have come forward to a parent or counselor years ago, Anderson said.

"Why were so many people, for so long, making choices that protected the institutions and not the children?" Anderson asked. "It's not just about Penn State, it's about all of us."

___

AP writer Genaro C. Armas contributed to this report from State College.

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PHILADELPHIA — Former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky sexually abused a boy more than 100 times and threatened to harm his family to keep him quiet, according to a lawsuit fil...
PHILADELPHIA — Former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky sexually abused a boy more than 100 times and threatened to harm his family to keep him quiet, according to a lawsuit fil...
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06:31 AM on 12/01/2011
Boystown, Second Mile, Penn State...places like that are supposed to help and protect our children, not pedophiles, or members of Congress!

Are Penn State and Second Mile another Boystown? Or the same? Mark Madden says Jerry Sandusky may have been 'Pimping Out Young Boys to Rich Donors.'
Sure sounds just like Boystown! Shine the Light on this Evil! Boystown, CIA and Congressmen... How high does it go? They managed the FBI cover-up and they banned the Discovery Channel that exposed it all, but here it is. Show it to the world. It is disturbing but we have to shine the light because evil needs darkness to survive
'Conspiracy of Silence' Illuminate the Evil',
http://saynotocorporateamerica.blogspot.com/2011/11/conspiracy-of-silence-illuminate-evil.html
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03:42 PM on 12/02/2011
there is probably a pe do ring operating with sandusky..

.wonder if all the investigations will even bother to look in that direction ?
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Kalemanao
We Didn't Start The Fire...
05:47 AM on 12/01/2011
PENALTY - OFF SIDES - DEFENSE!
ANYBODY... ANYONE... who in anyway... voices ANY DEFENSE, whatsoever... for a mature adult man... who possessed power, influence, unquestionable authority and wealth... Virtually having never to answer and/or explain his actions taken or deciscions he made.... Who, without any duress... chose... not to use his power... and influence... to correct a wrong being done to poor "little boys"... children comparatively speaking... over a period of years... is part of the problem... and, not part of the solution! Penalty - Defense - Game Is Over!
06:43 PM on 11/30/2011
A few days after news of the tragedy broke, the media reported, “The school considered cancelling the [Nebraska] game but decided it would be unfair to players and fans, board member Linda Strumpf told Reuters.”

Unfortunately, the bigger point is being missed. Coaches and administrators need to be better deterred from covering for sports programs when the sexual innocence of children is at risk. Firings and jail time are not enough. Shutting down such sports programs adds a lot. No one wants to be responsible for such an outcome. Accordingly, the Penn State football program needs to be shut down for at least the same number of years that the allegations of sexual misconduct were covered up.

Over the years, a number of collegiate basketball and football programs have been shut down for multiple years for various combinations of academic fraud, point shaving scandals, and recruiting violations. Those situations pale in comparison to what happened with the Penn State football program.
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05:40 PM on 11/30/2011
Most children learn to run at a very early age. Parents should teach them to run from an abuser immediately and report the incident to their parents. Not 30 years later when the abuser is wealthy.
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brenalexa
09:22 AM on 12/01/2011
Yeah. It's the parents' fault. What's wrong with you?? Obviously Sandusky was REALLY good at grooming his victims and convincing them not to say anything to anyone about what he was doing to them. There are reports that he threatened to harm them or their families and in one case threatened to send a boy home from a bowl game if he didn't cooperate. He was a master at his crimes and you want to blame the parents for not teaching their boys how to run away?
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sanfran55
08:01 PM on 12/01/2011
I hope you're joking. These criminals prey on vulnerable children, preferably from single parents, broken homes, and they pick a kid they can impress, intimidate, frighten and keep silent. They are predators - sick predators and criminals.
05:32 PM on 11/30/2011
I am confused. So, the victim isnt going to wait for a criminal trial to validate his claim. rather he is filing a civil case (certainly at his lawyers advice) because the burden of proof is not as hard to prove?. So the other victims, who are going to be in the legal battle in a criminal trial, are the ones who are going to go about proving Sandusky guilt.so, does it seem a little premature for this victim to start going for monetary comp when he hasnt even begun the criminal process? At least the other victims want justice, punish Sandusly as a criminal, then I assume they will go for civil...
10:09 AM on 12/01/2011
For the most part I agree, but is there a statute of limitation on this in Penn.? Perhaps that is why they are taking the civil path. I don't know but I don't like to assume anything about anyone.
gibraltar
Put in D to go forward to go backwards put it in R
05:29 PM on 11/30/2011
Before people start this crap about people coming forwrd to get on the "Money Wagon". It was the money wagon that allowed this to happen. All the way to the Governors office no one wanted to rock the Penn State Football boat. That would have meant an institution would be shown to have feet of clay, and the money that is College Football might stop rolling in. Children were victimized even after the first reports of Sanduskys wrong doing it was covered up at the highest levels. The Police covered it up the President and Athletic director covered it up the janitors who feared for their jobs covered it up. High school counselors Principals and coaches covered it up. Yeah there was a money wagon.I hope these many victims get every last dime and piece of property that Penn State has. They deserve nothing but infamy!
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gucoinc
05:05 PM on 11/30/2011
This was shoved under the rug because is would disrupt a very successful coach and football program, when you put too much power in an individuals hands, corruption will then ensue, watch out Alabama, you are setting up the same precedent with Saban, as was Paterno. However, let a kid get caught drinking on campus or smoking a little pot, and the justice system is made easy and swift. This is corruption at the highest level at Penn State.
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reader1
Interested in the world
05:04 PM on 11/30/2011
This is just a tragedy, of course there might be those who want to get on the money wagon, however, this is still a tragedy for all sides. G-d help the victims and Sandusky's family!!! But as far as Penn State is concerned, they are getting their come upings!!!!
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seiedvard
Tea-Party 2008-2012: You will be missed
06:01 PM on 11/30/2011
Actually, as far as penn state goes, you are off base
Sandusky was investigated by the police in 1998, he was let go right after
If this person was abused, I am not saying he wasn't, why didn't he come forward when there was an investigation back in 1998
It seems that we are going to get way more victims going after money than actually trying to get Sandusky behind bars
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brenalexa
09:57 AM on 12/01/2011
Was the investigation made public at that time? No doubt there will be victims going after money and why shouldn't they? These days that seems to be the only justice that gets afforded them. If Sandusky loses everything he owns to his victims so be it. If Penn State has to fork over millions because members of their staff covered up for Sandusky and subjected more children to his abuse then so be it. Those boys deserve something for the pain and shame they endured.
04:53 PM on 11/30/2011
To Sandusky's defense team regarding jury selection: Have fun finding people who don't have a predisposed bias of hatred toward your client and what he did to these children.

You may find some from the list of Second Mile financial supporters list, but, then again, you don't get to choose your potential jurors.

On second thought, don't worry about it. You already have a crooked judge in your back pocket.
This whole thing is disusting so far, and, I'm sure, the worst is yet to come.
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hetrose
Laugh, Love, Live!
04:48 PM on 11/30/2011
Steerike three! Your outta there!
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04:45 PM on 11/30/2011
Just move your hand up a little bit and tighten the grip please.
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glomtt
Terribly Political
04:34 PM on 11/30/2011
This is such a travesty, I hope they put Sandusky away for the rest of his life.
10:13 AM on 12/01/2011
...once found guilty in a Court of law
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ReadMyLipstick1
It can't be that hard.
04:06 PM on 11/30/2011
I hope these victims are given the support and encouragement they need to tell their stories and get this out and get through this. It would seem that telling it and dealing with it, as it were, would help the healing process. There is so much shame erroneously attached to the victims involved in sexual abuse/rape. It is really hard to get past that in order to tell what happened to you.
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kadellagroove
Left leaning, Jeffersonian Whig.
03:56 PM on 11/30/2011
And bring in the gold diggers!

Maybe this boy is telling the truth, in which case I'm very sorry he went through all of that... but lets let the trial end, lets get some justice, before we start the landfall of lawsuits designed at making ourselves wealthy.

The timing of this and the fact that his only desire is a civil suit and not charges... makes me a little suspicious of this.

I imagine that anyone with any proximity with Sandusky at any time when they were younger could feasibly come up with a story at this point in order to rake in some dough.

I say, let Sandusky be tried... if more victims want to press charges and be included in that trial let them, but keep the civil law suits away until justice has been served in the criminal case.
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03:45 PM on 12/02/2011
further charges must be included in the criminal trial....it demonstrates a pattern of criminality.