In today's Centre Daily Times, my letter to the editor stated that Penn State should not move forward until it corrects the inaccuracies of the Freeh Report.
The inaccuracies of the report were quickly publicized in the
initial media coverage of the Freeh Report press conference. The media reported Freeh's statement as facts, without verifying them in the body of the report. However, as this Patriot News article reveals, even with the time to review the report, and in light of new evidence, the
erroneous information remained uncorrected.
Red text indicates erroneous statements.
Bold text explains why the statement is incorrect and/or unsupported by evidence.
By
Ray
Blehar
Penn State Freeh report: Highlights of
findings
By SARA GANIM, The Patriot-News
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on July 12, 2012 at 9:43 AM, updated January 21, 2013 at 12:34 PM
Follow on Twitter
on July 12, 2012 at 9:43 AM, updated January 21, 2013 at 12:34 PM
A team led by former FBI Director
Louis Freeh releases its findings into Penn State
University’s handling of the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal
today. It alleges that Penn State officials, including coach Joe Paterno and
President Graham Spanier, worked to cover up Sandusky's crimes.
View
full sizeThe Freeh report on Penn State's handling of
the Jerry Sandusky sexual abuse case was released today.
Report highlights:
-- Joe Paterno followed the 1998 police
investigation closely, contrary to his grand jury testimony and public
statements before he died.
UNSUPPORTED: There is
one email with the subject line, “Joe Paterno” from 1998 stating that Curley
has touched base with “coach.” That is
the entirety of the evidence of Paterno’s alleged knowledge of the 1998
incident. In no way does the evidence support that Paterno "followed the investigation closely."
-- Vice President Gary Schultz wrote in notes
questioning an opening of "Pandora's Box" and "More
children?" in 1998.
-- Penn State had more than 350 policies for
reporting crimes, but the structure was uneven.
-- The board of trustees had no known knowledge of
the 1998 report, but that's inexcusable, Freeh said, because it means they put
too much power in Spanier's hands.
ERRONEOUS: According
to the By-Laws and the Standing Orders of the PSU Board of Trustees at the time
of the Freeh investigation, the Penn State University legal counsel was
required to brief the Board on all legal matters. The failure involved in this incident was the legal counsel was allegedly not informed of the matter by Gary Schultz or the chief of Police Tom Harmon. It is notable that the legal counsel was informed in 2001 and also did not brief the Board of Trustees.
-- The board should have started an internal
review in 2011, when it became public there was an investigation. The report
makes no mention of Erickson's defense of not knowing that Penn State was involved
in the Sandusky investigation.
ERRONEOUS: The grand
jury judge had issued a non-disclosure order to Penn State in February 2010,
therefore, Penn State officials would have been prevented from stating anything they testified to in the grand jury. The result would have been an ineffective internal review, much like the Freeh investigation.
-- Before 1998, several staff members witnessed
Sandusky showering with boys, but never reported it.
UNSUPPORTED: Only one
staff member, retired coach Richard Anderson, testified (at the Sandusky trial)
that he had seen Sandusky showering with a boy after a workout. There are no other staff members on record
stating they witnessed this.
-- Rodney Erickson, now the president, had
been uncomfortable in 1999 with Sandusky being granted "emeritus"
rank of Sandusky's low academic title, but did it anyway at Spanier's request.
-- There is no indication that Sandusky's 1999
retirement was forced because of the 1998 police incident.
-- Spanier, Schultz, Paterno and Curley "
repeatedly concealed critical facts, relating to Sandusky's child abuse, from
the authorities, the board of trustees, Penn State community, and the public at
large," to avoid bad publicity, Freeh said.
UNSUPPORTED: There is
no evidence to support that Spanier, Curley, Paterno, and Schultz were aware of
Sandusky’s “child abuse” in 1998 and in 2001.
The 1998 case was reported to and investigated by the authorities, who
found no “child abuse” occurred, thus there was no “child abuse” to
conceal. The failure to report
the allegation pertaining to the 2001 incident is a matter that is pending trial, however
two PSU officials recalled the incident was reported to the proper authorities. Child abuse investigations are confidential
in nature, therefore there is not a reasonable expectation that any information
about a pending investigation would be shared outside of those immediately
involved in an investigation.
-- Curley, Schultz and Spanier were prepared to
report the 2001 incident to authorities, but that changed after a conversation
Curley had with Paterno. It's not known what was said.
UNSUPPORTED: Examination
of the email evidence in the Freeh Report shows that the initial plan to report
the 2001 incident to DPW as an option was in place on February 12, 2001 and
remained an option after Paterno talked with Curley. There was no change to the plan.
-- Cynthia Baldwin, the in-house counsel for
Penn State, minimized the seriousness of the investigation when she briefed
trustees, Freeh said.
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