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Jim Wallis

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Suffer the Little Children: Crime and Punishment at Penn State

Posted: 07/26/2012 2:55 pm

The disciplinary actions announced this week by the NCAA against the Penn State University football program were severe.

They included a $60 million fine (equivalent to their football proceeds of one year), a four-year ban on playing in post-season bowl games, a four-year reduction in the school's number of football scholarships from 25 to 15, vacating all of the wins of Penn State's football wins from 1998-2011 from official records (including vitiating the numbers that made their famous coach Joe Paterno the "winningest" big-school college football coach in history), giving all returning football players the right to transfer to another school, a five-year probationary period for the football program, and reserving the right to do further investigations and impose additional sanctions on individuals for their behavior.

That will end Penn State's dominant national football program for the foreseeable future and is a much more serious punishment than simply banning the university from playing football for a year  -- aka a "death sentence"--  might have been.

I agree with the NCAA's disciplinary decisions and would have supported even harsher penalties against Penn State.

I love sports, as do my two sons. We play sports, I coach both of my boys in baseball, we often watch sports together, and have long conversations about the sports and athletes that we love most.

The NCAA's actions against Penn State send a clear signal and an important one.

Jerry Sandusky, an assistant football coach who worked closely with the team's legendary coach Joe Paterno, sexually abused young boys for years. He raped children and his hideous crimes were covered up by Paterno and others, who knew, but did little if anything to stop him.

Sandusky was convicted of 45 of 48 counts of sexual abuse over a 15-year period. Some of his crimes occurred in his office and other facilities at Penn State, including the football team's locker room.

Sandusky is awaiting sentencing. He will likely spend the rest of his life in jail.

And all of the young boys he abused, using the cover of a program for at risk children that he ran, will have to live with the consequences of Sandusky's abuse for the rest of their lives. That most of the kids he abused were from low-income families adds even more injustice to it all.

This is one of the clearest examples of a fundamental moral problem in our society -- the protection of an institution has become more important than the lives of innocent children.

That is exactly what happened at Penn State. The heinous crimes of a disgusting child abuser were institutionally covered up and allowed to go on, while people who knew or suspected looked the other way. And it was all done to protect the enormous influence and lucrative financial profits of a dominant football program, and the reputations of powerful men -- including the legendary Paterno.

Quite honestly and painfully, this also is the problem with the horrible pedophilia scandals of the Catholic Church. An institution and the reputation of priests and bishops became more important than the safety and well-being of children. The institution sacrificed the innocence and well-being -- physical, emotional, and spiritual -- of untold numbers of children for its own benefit.

Whether it is a powerful football program, a powerful church, or any powerful institution, as people of faith we always must defend the vulnerable and innocent from such abuses, and impose the strongest punishments possible when they occur.

My boys saw the story about the NCAA penalties against Penn State on ESPN and wanted to talk about it. It shocked and hurt them that such things were allowed to go on under the guise of social service and the umbrella of a great football program.

I was acutely aware that my 14- and 9-year-old sons were the same ages of some of the children that Sandusky continually abused. I knew how I, or any parent, would feel if these awful things had happened to their children.

And yet the football legends at Penn State sacrificed the children to the institutional and personal self-interest of those with power.

That is a terrible crime.

Clearly, this is a story not just about football. It's about all institutions and the powerful people who run them not being held accountable for their behavior.

I truly hope that a signal has indeed been sent and all of us now will be paying much closer attention -- especially to the children who need and deserve our protection.

Jim Wallis is the author of Rediscovering Values: A Guide for Economic and Moral Recovery, and CEO of Sojourners. Follow Jim on Twitter @JimWallis.

 
 
 

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The disciplinary actions announced this week by the NCAA against the Penn State University football program were severe. They included a $60 million fine (equivalent to their football proceeds ...
The disciplinary actions announced this week by the NCAA against the Penn State University football program were severe. They included a $60 million fine (equivalent to their football proceeds ...
 
 
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01:05 PM on 07/29/2012
Really? You see nothing wrong with punishing all the (innocent) people who played football or worked on the sidelines for Penn State since 1998 by taking away their victories? What did THEY do? I doubt that any of them knew anything. What will this punishment of hundreds of innocent people accomplish? Joe Paterno is dead, and all the people who will suffer from this punishment had absolutely nothing to do with the crime.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
apt06
11:48 AM on 07/28/2012
PSU should have gotten the "death penalty". They will be allowed to play football this year and that is totally wrong.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
evolvedtg
A lie's a lie, even if everyone believes it.
09:15 PM on 07/27/2012
Penn State, Citadel of Horrors.
10:13 AM on 07/27/2012
Moral of story: Don't get caught.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
evolvedtg
A lie's a lie, even if everyone believes it.
09:16 PM on 07/27/2012
Next time he'll know to leave no witnesses. If he gets out he'll escalate.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dedrick Warmack
04:20 AM on 07/27/2012
I do not see how this penalizing of the Football Players sends any messages to pedophiles, executing Sandusky might do such but we all know that Pedophiles are more likely to be released early from prison than a drug user or drug dealer with no violent tendencies, and none of us have ever heard any stories in the Media of a Priest being sent to Prison or sanctions being brought down on the Church, the NCAA who earns money off of kids blood, sweat and tears just thought this was a way for them to make a name for themselves, if Paterno is dead, Sandusky is in jail, and all other affiliates of the Coaching program were fired, why bring penalties against those left?! It doesn't make sense, and the sad part about it all is that Joe Paterno was the last Honorable Legend left in Sports...until this incident came to light...But it's such a shame that the kids at Penn State and the innocent coaches are left to sort the ashes of this horrible situation....
02:48 AM on 07/28/2012
The players are free to transfer to colleges where child rape is not condoned and hidden by the highest levels of the university administration.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dedrick Warmack
01:02 AM on 07/29/2012
yeah, so they're careers are now distorted after building friendships with classmates and professors and fellow teammates, still doesn't make sense to punish students for a crime committed by adults that had nothing to do with football....
01:30 PM on 07/29/2012
What about the players who already graduated...and have 0 victories on their resumes. What about the former coaches and other employees? How can we go back to 1998 and let all those players go to other schools?
08:02 PM on 07/26/2012
No amount of incarceration can ever make up for the heinous crimes against these children by not only the perpetrator Sandusky, but also all at Penn State who were aware of his behavior and did nothing to bring it to a halt. Wallis is correct for his position in this matter, as well as that of the Catholic Church and all others who take advantage of and/or abuse children those who place sports above morality should hang their heads in shame. Unfortunately, like the gun massacres, they will never cease.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stillstandingkickingbutt
Please, I have the floor
07:50 PM on 07/26/2012
For those who believe in trickle down examples.. its time to BUCK up pull up their draws and get an education For those who stay this could be an op to venture into service for the people.After all The life span of a football player lasts a mere 10-15 yrs IF he is lucky? However, its their choice whatever i wish them well
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07:23 PM on 07/26/2012
There is a culture of silence and collusion in our country . Priests don't tell on other priests. Cops don't tell on cops. Boys in the hood don't tell on boys in the hood. Inmates don't tell on inmates . And the good ole boys, don't tell on the good ole boys. I wonder if it is a Y chromosome thing....In each and every case, men have abdicated the responsibility of doing what is right in favor of colluding to not rock the boat.
03:39 AM on 07/27/2012
You are right. Very well said...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
evolvedtg
A lie's a lie, even if everyone believes it.
09:22 PM on 07/27/2012
Doctors not telling on doctors, bankers not telling on bankers, and politicians exposing the crap out of each other, as long as they're not in the same party!
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FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
07:06 PM on 07/26/2012
An interesting take on crime (both legal and moral) and punishment in the NCAA by Mr Wallis.
It begs the question of where is the actual morality and decency in punishing thousands of innocents for the crimes of a few men?
But then again that seems to be the ever increasing popular "justice" of 21st century American "Christians": Punish innocent folks (by the thousands) who happen to be in close physical/geographic proximity to those few individuals who have actually committed crimes/sins in order to "send a message" to potential and unkown future crimminals (see: neocon iraq war).
With "morality" like this is it any wonder America is failing in almost every way?
justobserve
Not left nor right or center. Just a free thinker!
08:37 AM on 07/27/2012
Shouldn't the paedophile and his enablers have thought of the consequences of their actions or inactions that would have affected the whole programs or the institution? In fact, that was the whole thing that they thought of: protecting the program and the institution at the expense of the little boys who were in a very vulnerable situation. In any circumstance involving a crime, some people who didn't do the crime, get hurt by the punishment of the criminal. That's to be expected and that's why most of us would thing hard before we do something that would affect other people. It's too easy if our action only affects ourself. Blame those people instead of the punishment they got now. They should have known it. That's a great deterrent so people know if they do something like this they have to expect the worst not for themselves only but also people or the institution related to them.
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FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
09:54 AM on 07/27/2012
So what you're saying about all the completely innocent people who had nothing to do with any of the original crimes but who are currently at Pen State and are now hurt by the NCAA's ruling is "tough luck!"
I'm sorry but that philosophy ultimately breaks down to "might makes right" and has no place in a decent, law abiding society. Of course increasing America is not a place that respects decency or it's own laws so in that you are right in step with the author of this article and the majority of the country.