Lest we forget the fear and the blame - unjustly derived from the Attorney General Linda Kelly who succeeded her mentor - new Gov. Tom Corbett - who served on the Board of Trustees with his cronies and appointees - who hired Louis Freeh and paid 6.5 million of your money for his indictment of lies.
On Nov 7 Linda Kelly takes the stage with her props claiming Mike McQueary "SAW a boy being subjected to anal intercourse" by Jerry Sandusky and said those words to Joe Paterno, AD Tim Curley and VP Gary Schultz.
John P. Surma's Vendetta leads to the termination of Paterno and Spanier |
Spanier tells Surma he will not cooperate because firing Paterno is the wrong thing to do because it will signal the media that the Board of Trustees believes Paterno is guilty. Spanier calls on Surma to circle the wagons and support Joe, Tim and Gary until the Attorney General proves her charges. Spanier wants to lead Penn State out of this mess. Surma tells Spanier he is going to fire Joe anyway.
Spanier releases a statement of full support for Curley and Schultz saying these two loyal and dedicated long term employees of Penn State deserve the support of the Board until they are proved to be guilty. Spanier knows the Board of Trustees has been called to State College for a meeting the night of the 9th of November so Spanier gets word to Joe Paterno and Joe releases a statement saying he is resigning effective the end of the season so "the Board need not waste any time dealing with any decision concerning him". Joe has not been charged with any wrongdoing and is being noted as cooperating by the Attorney General.
THE RETIREMENT STATEMENT BY JOE PATERNO
On Nov 9th. Surma is preparing for the Board of Trustees meeting with Gov Corbett and his business and industry members - the most wealthy, powerful and influential insiders who along with Corbett's hand picked appointees comprise a block of highly organized Board members who head all of the important committees. This is not the unprepared making an obvious mistake as we first suspected. This is a highly orchestrated coup designed to create a major distraction from the truth.
Lone voice of reason Mimi Coppersmith |
The notice of his termination was delivered to Joe by telephone after a messenger carried a telephone number to Joe's house telling the great coach to call John P. Surma in order to get the news of his termination
ON NOV 10th spilling over past midnight from the massacre by the board on Nov 9th students took to the streets of State College. Recall the outrage that swept the campus and the reaction of the media.
For the most part the students demonstrated their outrage with controlled anger that did not involve any malicious destruction of property. Only a very few decided to "riot" but like all such gatherings the media will seek out the aberrant destructive behavior to sensationalize blowing it all out of proportion to the event. Particularly true when the media can claim to have been attacked. Images of a toppled TV news van are far more compelling than crying students with candles.
There were many headlines accompanied by the usual suspects and talking heads pontificating on the miserable behavior of students outraged over the termination of a pedophile enabler.
Here's a small sample of the Media Tsunami that swept the nation in the wake of the Bleak November of 2011 in State College. Quoth the Raven - NEVERMORE.
In wake of Jerry Sandusky scandal, Penn State coach Joe Paterno must go By Ryan Cooper
Hey Numbskull - the 98 incident was thoroughly investigated by police & child services - not "swept under the rug"I am in no way calling Paterno a victim. According to that grand jury report linked above, there was an incident involving Sandusky and a young boy in 1998, which went unpunished, followed by another incident in 2002, which was also swept under the rug
The Post’s View --- Penn State’s abdication of legal and moral obligations
of course we now know that the grad asst. saw no such thing and the victim 2 incident was far from the "most egregious".Most egregious was the 2002 incident in which a 28-year-old graduate assistant returning to the football facility was surprised to see the lights and shower on at 9:30 p.m. According to the grand jury, "he saw a naked boy . . . whose age he estimated to be ten years old, with his hands up against the wall, being subjected to anal intercourse by a naked Sandusky."
In Penn State’s scandal, where was the leadership?
Edward Robinson Washington PostIn 2002, after Sandusky had retired — although he still had an office and enjoyed the run of the Penn State athletic facilities — a football team "graduate assistant" saw Sandusky raping a young boy in the showers, according to the grand jury report.Once again the lie in the Grand Jury Presentment leads the piece.
Joe Paterno must leave now: a religious argument By Rabbi Shmuel Herzfeld
another example of the effect of the lie in the presentmentAccording to the grand jury indictment, a graduate assistant told Joe Paterno that he saw what appeared to be an anal sexual assault by Sandusky on a boy he estimated to be ten years old in the Penn State showers and that he reported this incident to Paterno.
Penn State and Joe Paterno deserve part of the blame Mike Wise
The 23 page Presentment is cause for their blame? The only part ever reported to Paterno was the 2002 ambiguous report by McQuery - Mr Wise.They would all be party to a worse crime than any crooked, pay-for-play booster at Miami, Ohio State or even SMU ever committed: guilty of protecting a program before a child.
You can’t read the 23-page grand jury report and come to any other conclusion; Penn State football and its pristine reputation apparently superseded the alleged sexual assault of a young boy — perhaps as many as eight young boys — over 15 years by Sandusky.
Joe Paterno ignored his moral responsibility by Tracee Hamilton
complete with inflammatory picture of Joe with Sandusky
Yes when buried in the pile of 40 counts the victim 2 account absorbs the weight of the rest
from way back when
After reading the grand jury report, what I can’t get out of my head is, well, all of it. But particularly disturbing is the account of that poor child in the football facility showers in 2002
Penn State’s abdication of legal and moral obligations WaPo Editorial
another example of the impact of the false Grand Jury Presentment taken as "most egregious" fact.Most egregious was the 2002 incident in which a 28-year-old graduate assistant returning to the football facility was surprised to see the lights and shower on at 9:30 p.m. According to the grand jury, "he saw a naked boy . . . whose age he estimated to be ten years old, with his hands up against the wall, being subjected to anal intercourse by a naked Sandusky."
ESPN took great delight in publishing daily pieces to go along with an onslaught of talking heads waxing serious about the dearth of moral values in Happy Valley.
The tragedy of Joe Paterno By Gene Wojciechowski
Too much disinformation to quote in this hit pieceThe descriptions from one administrator: "Fabulous and horrendous" … "Surreptitious" … "Self-absorbed" … "Calculating" … "Protective of everything he's done."
JoePa is three-dimensional, capable of extraordinary acts of kindness and charity, as well as extraordinary acts of backroom politics. But he isn't who we thought he was. If he were, he would have called the police nine years ago when first alerted to the alleged misconduct of former Nittany Lions assistant coach and friend Jerry Sandusky.
Why Penn State Needs to Change Its Name...Now! By John Tantillo
The insanity of this FOX NEWS Opinion piece is self-explanatoryWith legendary former football coach Joe Paterno’s grand jury admission on December 16 that he knew of Jerry Sandusky’s "inappropriate" behavior with a minor as far back as 2002, it is clear that the rot goes deep at Penn State.
Radical measures are needed to restore this once great institution. They must be taken now.Bottom line? Penn State needs to change its name.
Scandal sullies Joe Paterno's legacy by Ivan Maisel
The public is outraged because you outraged them!!!Since Pennsylvania attorney general Linda Kelly released the grand jury's findings in the Sandusky case on Nov. 5, the sort of feeding frenzy that has developed is typically reserved for Hollywood or Washington.
The public is outraged. The public wants blood. The cries of moral superiority have been loud and visceral and long. How could Paterno have not done something?
Joe Paterno's name off Big Ten trophy
Penn State story's expanding horizons by Lester Munson"We believe that it would be inappropriate to keep Joe Paterno's name on the trophy at this time," Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany said in a statment. "The trophy and its namesake are intended to be celebratory and aspirational, not controversial.
Was everybody in on it?
The worst scandal in sports history and everybody at Penn State was in on it?It's already arguably the worst scandal in the history of sports, and it might be even worse than we think. How can that be?
The view from our Courtside Seat doesn't naturally lend itself to conspiracy theories. Our long life in sports and the law has taught us the value of cold, sober consideration over feverish, hand-wringing speculation, and the better part of valor might suggest we ignore the cumulative effect of the series of developments being reported out of Penn State this week. Then again, it is, as they say, what it is. So while it pains us to jump off this cliff, we're going to take the plunge in this case.
Here, then, are some elements to the story suggesting the possibility that the Jerry Sandusky-Joe Paterno-Mike McQueary saga and its alleged cover-up could be deeper and wider than we know.
Joe Paterno will have to live with choice by Ian O'Conner
The legendary coach's ultimate punishment will be looking in the mirror each morning
GOOD GRIEF!!! Can you be more hyperbolic?Paterno will have to live with his inaction in the Jerry Sandusky case. He'll have to live with the graphic details of young boys allegedly being raped, of young lives being destroyed. He'll have to live with the fact that some victims might've been spared if the great grandfather of college athletics -- a beloved do-gooder in a sport often lacking in redeeming social value -- hadn't spent less time & energy on trying to stop an alleged predator than he spends on his average game plan.
Penn State's long road to recovery By Mark Schlabach
Obviously PSU officials only knew about one allegation.As the shock of the news that former defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky is alleged to have abused eight boys over 15 years -- and that Penn State officials knew about the allegations and did nothing -- begins to subside, Penn State's faculty, students, alumni and fans must begin to pick up the pieces.
Joe Paterno failed his biggest decision By Mark Schlabach
and the beat goes on and on about the PENN STATE ScandalPaterno was fired because he failed miserably while making the biggest decision of his life.
Told by a graduate assistant in 2002 that former Nittany Lions defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky had sexually assaulted a boy, believed to be 10 years old, in the showers of Penn State's football complex, Paterno did nothing more than inform athletic director Tim Curley and university vice president Gary Schultz of the allegation.
- Who is Jerry Sandusky Video on ESPN
- OTL State of Shock Video 1998 investigation, janitor incident,
- Rod Gilmore - View of Paterno Has Changed video w Gilmore in front of Syracuse Univ Logos
Penn State Nittany Lions again deficient in leadership Mechelle Voepel
Penn State sexual abuse scandal puts faith in all college sports ...Scoop Jackson
Penn State Scandal -- TV van gets flipped as Joe Paterno riots .
Penn State, scorched by scandal, struggles to define its itself Wright Thompson
Penn State was a place from another time, in a self-proclaimed happy valley. Now, scorched by scandal, the town that Joe Paterno built struggles to define its icon and itself.
Penn State football should be retired, permanently By Jennifer Rubin
AP IMPACT: PSU culture explained away Sandusky
In this article published this morning Sports Illustrated repackages the common knowledge of what has been known for a month and builds it into an indictment of Penn State building thin and circumstantial bits of data into the worst case scenario.
We cannot forget or forgive the inimitable Gregg Doyel and his one man crusade
Gricar's 2005 disappearance only one of many mysteries in PSU scandal
Jerry Sandusky was investigated before he allegedly was caught in the act in 2009. Why the former PSU defensive coordinator wasn't charged is a mystery. Gregg Doyel says another mystery is why the prosecutor in the case later disappeared.
The real Penn State? In Room 206, plenty of heart to be found
In State College, Pa., since Tuesday, the horrific, jaw-dropping developments there wore him down. But Gregg Doyel gets a better view of Penn State from the students at the Carnegie Building, Room 206.
McQueary to coach Saturday? Reasoning difficult to comprehend
Mike McQueary will coach for Penn State vs. Nebraska despite not doing the same things Joe Paterno didn't in 2002. Gregg Doyel doesn't understand and hopes there's more to it than concern for the Nittany Lions receiving corps.
PSU students flood campus with misplaced Paterno adoration
Penn State students take to the streets to vent after the firing of Joe Paterno. Gregg Doyel witnesses the scene and hopes one day these kids will understand that the school they profess to love had no choice.
Untouchable no more: Paterno out at Penn State
Joe Paterno called the shots at Penn State for years. When he tried to retire on his terms after the scandal, the Board of Trustees called his bluff. Call it a retirement. Call it a firing. Gregg Doyel calls it over.
Want to find JoePa supporters? Get on his lawn
Joe Paterno's career at Penn State could be nearing its end as the sexual abuse scandal rages on. Gregg Doyel visits an impromptu rally outside of JoePa's house to find fans lauding their legendary coach, no matter what the facts say.
Calling off Paterno conference shows Penn State's cowardice
There have been many missteps since the Sandusky allegations started at Penn State, some by Joe Paterno. Gregg Doyel says not allowing Paterno to address the issue, or at least hear questions, was dead wrong.
Penn State may be trying diligently to fix the Jerry Sandusky/Joe Paterno fiasco, but to some protestors, the damage is evidently permanent and beyond redemption. How else to explain this picture tweeted by Philadelphia news anchor Jim Gardner?
According to Gardner, that's a 1975 graduate of the university burning his diploma, and others have described the situation as multiple protestors doing the same.
Joe Paterno 'delayed forwarding report of Sandusky sex abuse because he didn't want to ruin the weekend'
Even the British Press got it wrong after the Perjury hearing.
Even the British Press got it wrong after the Perjury hearing.
McQueary on stand: 'I was shocked, horrifed' article post only most damaging parts of McQueary testimony
WHAT ABOUT THE BOYS? Andrew Rosenthal is horrified
He then explained that he went to see Mr. Paterno, but that he did not tell Mr. Paterno the details of what he witnessed in the shower, out of respect for the coach.
When I read that, I shouted something I can’t print here. He didn’t tell what he saw out of respect for Mr. Paterno?
The End of Paterno Joe Posnanski
1. I think Joe Paterno had the responsibility as a leader and a man to stop the horrific rapes allegedly committed by Jerry Sandusky, and I believe he will have regrets about this for the rest of his life.
2. Because of this, Joe Paterno could no longer coach at Penn State University.
Beyond these two points, though, I said I wasn’t going to write about this because I feel like there’s still a lot of darkness around. I don’t know what Joe Paterno knew. I don’t know how he handled it. I don’t know if he followed up. I don’t know anything about Paterno’s role in this except for what little was said about that in the horrifying and stomach-turning grand jury findings. People have jumped to many conclusions about Paterno’s role and his negligence, and they might be right. I’ll say it again: They might be right. But they might be wrong, too. And I’m writing a book about the man. I can’t live in that world of maybes.
In 2000, the late Myles Brand made the controversial decision to oust revered Indiana basketball coach Bob Knight. Brand, then Indiana Univ president, drew the scorn of students and alumni but the admiration of his peers, who named him NCAA president two years later
- JoePa: Shocked, saddened by sex abuse charges (11.06.2011)
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) -- Penn State coach Joe Paterno said he was shocked, saddened and as surprised as everyone else to learn longtime assistant Jerry Sandusky was charged with sexually abusing young boys over a 15-year period, including four years when Sandusky still was a member of the Nittany Lions' staff.
- Accusations of child sex, cover-up rock Penn St.(11.06.2011)
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) -- An explosive sex abuse scandal and allegations of a cover-up rocked Happy Valley after former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky, once considered Joe Paterno's heir apparent, was charged with sexually assaulting eight boys over 15 years. Among the allegations was that a graduate assistant saw Sandusky assault a boy in the shower at the team's practice center in 2002.
- Michael McCann: Did Joe Paterno break the law?(11.09.2011)
While Pennsylvania Attorney General Linda Kelly says that her office won't file charges against Joe Paterno for not reporting the alleged child sexual abuse by former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky, the 84-year-old coach could eventually face criminal charges for perjury, obstruction of justice and violating the state's Child Protective Services Law. Paterno could also become a defendant in civil lawsuits filed by Sandusky's alleged victims
- Jon Wertheim: Emotion-filled night at Penn State draws screaming crowds, riot gear(11.09.2011)
Sports Illustrated's Jon Wertheim was on the scene at State College, Pa., as news hit the campus of the immediate dismissal of Joe Paterno and Penn State president Graham Spanier on Wednesday night. SI.com quickly caught up with Wertheim via telephone
- Penn State trustees fire Paterno, Spanier amid scandal(11.09.2011)
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) -- Joe Paterno was fired by the Penn State board of trustees Wednesday night despite saying he would retire as coach after the football season ended, brought down by the growing furor over the handling of child sex abuse allegations against an assistant coach.
- Penn State's Paterno retiring at season's end(11.09.2011)
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) -- The day was always coming. The old coach was 84, and each new season brought questions whether it would be his last. No one, though, expected it to happen quite like this..
- Andy Staples: Joe Paterno's Penn State legacy forever marred by scandal
First things first. Penn State coach Joe Paterno is not a monster, and he is not evil. A lot of people who read what I wrote about Paterno on Tuesday seem to think I painted him that way. If the charges against former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky are true, Sandusky is an unspeakably evil monster. Paterno, on the other hand, is an otherwise decent person who made a mistake
- Nebraska AD confident in safety at Penn St. game
Nebraska athletic director Tom Osborne feels certain his school's football traveling party and fans will be safe at Saturday's game
- Paterno issues statement on being fired by trustees By The Associated Press
- PSU: McQueary won't coach Saturday due to threats
-Penn State assistant coach Mike McQueary will miss Saturday's game against Nebraska after the school said he received "multiple threats."
- TV news van tipped as PSU rally gets violent
Crowds toppled a television news van during a rally after the firing of Penn State coach Joe Paterno.
- Cris Collinsworth: Paterno will be remembered for what he didn't do
Cris discusses the Jerry Sandusky case at Penn State and how head coach Joe Paterno's failure to respond ruined his legendary career and reputation.
- PSU trustees fire Paterno, president Spanier
Penn State's trustees fired coach Joe Paterno and president Graham Spanier amid a child sex abuse scandal involving former assistant coach Jerry Sandusky.
- Stewart Mandel: Horrific closing chapter shouldn't overshadow Paterno's entire career(11.10.2011)
It seems the longer a legendary coach stays on the job, the slimmer his chances become to exit on his own terms. Woody Hayes won 13 Big Ten titles at Ohio State, but his tenure ended overnight after he punched a Clemson player on national television. Bob Knight won three NCAA titles at Indiana, but he was eventually fired for choking a player in practice, then violating a zero-tolerance policy by grabbing a student's arm. Bobby Bowden single-handedly built Florida State into ..
- Governor: I'd lost confidence in Paterno, Spanier
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- (AP) Gov. Tom Corbett said Thursday that he supported moves by Penn State's board of trustees to force out famed football coach Joe Paterno and president Graham Spanier, saying he'd lost confidence in their leadership capacity.
- Paterno no longer Medal of Freedom nominee
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) -- Along with his job as head football coach at Penn State, Joe Paterno may also lose a shot at the prestigious Presidential Medal of Freedom.
- Andy Staples: Penn State finally puts university, not football, first in firing Paterno
This week has been like a movie ... messed up. --Penn State quarterback Rob Bolden on Twitter at 10:27 p.m., Wednesday.
- Mike Still: Penn State students are confused, but they're not the bad guys
In the span of a week, I've seen my university go from one of the nation's most respected institutions to an embarrassment; from a school that prides itself on "success with honor" to a model for what not to do
- Frank Deford: The Penn State scandal defies the masculine culture of football
- Michael McCann: Examining legal fallout from Sandusky interview, Penn St. scandal
As confounding as was the failure of Penn State officials to act, the consensus to explain the motives for their ignoble behavior is first, Joe Paterno didn't want to scar the reputation of himself or his football program, and then university executives wanted to protect the reputation of the dear old coach and his moneymaking team
Jerry Sandusky's interview Monday night with Bob Costas on NBC's Rock Center raises more questions as to what legal issues may emerge as this story unfolds. SI.com legal expert Michael McCann answers five key questions
- Report: Ex-PSU officer questioned player treatment
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) -- A former Penn State official charged with enforcing discipline at the school said Tuesday that Joe Paterno's players got in trouble more often than other students, and got special treatment compared to non-athletes.
- THIS IS PENN STATE
"HAD SANDUSKY NOT BEEN SO BRAZEN, HAD HE SIMPLY RESTRICTED HIMSELF TO THE FOOTBALL FACILITIES, THERE IS LITTLE TO SUGGEST HE WOULD HAVE BEEN CAUGHT. FOR SANDUSKY—IF NOT FOR THE BOYS—PENN STATE FOOTBALL WAS A SAFE HAVEN."
- A PLACE APART
- A LEGACY IN TATTERS (11.21.2011)
SI senior writer Tom Verducci, Penn State class of '82, reflects on the values that have defined, and endangered, his alma mater
Paterno's place in the record book is assured, but SI special contributor Jack McCallum says the dark final chapter ruined the story
College Football NCAA Penn State scandal Penn State and Joe Paterno and Heinz Kluetmeier and Jon Wertheim and SI 2011
The Devil and Joe Paterno by Russ Dothat
No higher cause can trump that obligation — not a church, and certainly not a football program. And not even a lifetime of heroism can make up for leaving a single child alone, abandoned to evil, weeping in the dark. |
I won't even get into the plethora of similar stuff that filled The Patriot News or other Pennsylvanian papers. This should be quite sufficient to prove the point we already know. The public opinion was shaped and fed by this media frenzy and convicted Penn State and Joe Paterno in the court of public opinion without hope of a defense. And it all was thanks to AG Linda Kelley and her Grand Jury Presentment that launched a lie into a tsunami that swept away all reason and any presumption of innocence.
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