Showing posts with label lies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lies. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 6

Ferman Presser: Lies, Contradictions, & Ethics Violations




Then-Montgomery County DA Risa Ferman's August 2015 press conference contained lies and contradictions

By

Ray Blehar

On December 29th, I wrote that step #5 of the PA Corruption Network's Playbook was for prosecutors to go public with trumped up charges based on questionable evidence and/or falsehoods in order to publicly smear political opponents.


Then-DA Risa Ferman's August 6, 2015 press conference -- like those given by former Attorney General (AG) Linda Kelly in relation to charging PSU officials Tim Curley, Gary Schultz, and Graham Spanier -- was a page out of the "playbook" and contained a number of falsehoods.


Lies


Vermin's, er, Ferman's statements regarding the actions of AG's Kane's head of security, Patrick Rocco Reese, were absolutely false and were likely made in an attempt to establish a non-existent link between grand jury information and Kane.


At 9:29:


"Also filed today, we filed a charge of indirect criminal contempt against  Patrick Rocco Reese....he's charged with indirect criminal contempt based upon the evidence we gathered which would prove he secretly snuck into the grand jury files in violation of a protection order issued by Judge Carpenter."


At 10:16:


"After that protection order was issued, Agent Reese, on a repeated basis, snuck into those grand jury files and obtained confidential grand jury information."  



Reese was charged with Violation of a Protective Order, however the supporting evidence in no way proved that any grand jury information was ever in the possession of Reese. 

Protective Order Notice #123 stated that all grand jury information was retained by Supervising Judge William Carpenter and Special Prosecutor Thomas Carluccio, thus could not have been accessed by an email search of the AG Office's email system -- regardless of whether Reese "snuck" into the files or not.





The "secretly snuck" language in Ferman's statements are solely based on the dubious testimony of the actual grand jury leaker, Adrian King.  


Reese was convicted -- by Judge Carpenter, not a jury -- for using email search terms that prosecutors alleged were attempts to find out information about the grand jury investigation of Kane.  Reese is rightfully appealing the conviction.


But Ferman didn't stop there.  


As we saw in the case of the PSU 3, the law was misinterpreted (intentionally) to allege that Kane was behind the "scheme" to leak confidential materials.


At 6:00, Ferman stated:


The materials gathered and distributed in the course of this scheme were confidential investigative materials.  And confidential investigative information is protected in Pennsylvania by  a statute.  It's called the Criminal History Records and Information Act.   In law enforcement we refer to it as the acronym, "cree-ah", C-H-R-I-A and it is detailed in the charging documents.



First, Kane wasn't charged with violating CHRIA.  Next, neither the grand jury presentment nor the charging documents contain any details about CHRIA.  The grand jury presentment made two references to CHRIA that simply cited its title and code.   


Ferman deceived the public by never explaining the law (in the AOPC) and by using the irrelevant grand jury testimony of Adrian King to make the case that Kane released information covered under CHRIA.  See below.





The alleged confidential material that was leaked to the press was a transcript -- compiled in 2014 -- by David Peifer, the Special Agent in Charge of the Bureau of Special Investigations.  The transcript was not part of the AG's or any other criminal investigative file.  Nor was it the result of any  formal or informal criminal investigation or inquiry -- the legal requirement to be considered "investigation information" under CHRIA.

This evidence indicates that Ferman purposely misinterpreted the law (and deceived the public about it) in order to publicly allege a conspiracy by Kane.  



Contradictions

Ferman's statements at the outset of her press conference about leaking of grand jury were contradicted later in the press conference.

At 4:37 Ferman stated:  


"This investigative team determined that Attorney General Kathleen Kane devised a scheme to secretly leak confidential criminal investigation information and secret grand jury materials directly to political operatives in the hopes of embarrassing and harming former state prosecutors, whom she believed -- she believed without evidence -- that made her look bad.  


The affidavit of probable cause, which is our charging document, you have before you, details how this scheme was accomplished and the crux of it was obtaining and compiling this confidential information, delivering it to a political operative with instructions to leak it to the press, all designed to make it look like a former prosecutor went soft on a corruption investigation."


At 24:20, Ferman refuted the earlier statement, explaining that Kane didn't compile and deliver the materials.


If you, if you read through the evidence that relates to the conspiracy charge, it is clear for the evidence we gathered, that while the Attorney General orchestrated and directed the scheme, that she, herself, did not compile the materials and deliver them to Mr. Morrow.  So clearly, there were at least one other, perhaps, more individuals involved, and that is the crux of conspiracy.  What a conspiracy means, in the most basic terms, is the act of one is the act of all. So all of the people involved in the leak of that information can be responsible."


As my January 1st blogpost pointed out, Ferman had no evidence of Kane possessing any grand jury materials at the time the Philadelphia Daily News story went to press, thus she was making material misstatements at the press conference.



Ethics?

In late December, the press reported that Kane is under investigation by the Ethics Commission based on a complaint lodged by a citizen activist. 

Interestingly enough, concerned citizens of Pennsylvania could make an ethics case against Ferman for the extrajudicial statements she made at her press conference. 


At 13:40:


"Ladies and gentlemen, this is a sad day for the citizens of Pennsylvania and it is a sad day for all of us in law enforcement.  A prosecutor has the responsibility as a minister of justice, and when he or she does her job honorably - as we should - we honor our oath.  We stand up and do what is right every day.  When someone is entrusted with upholding the law, violates that oath and violates that law we are bound to uphold, we are all victims -- everyone of us.  When an elected official violates the public trust and violates his or her oath, it is up to us to stand up and hold that person accountable.


Obviously, to tell all of Pennsylvania's citizens that they are victims of Kane is poisoning the jury pool and appears to be a "textbook" example of a prejudicial statement.


The flip side happened at 12:33:


I'd like to thank the staff members of the Office of the Attorney General - current and former.  Members of the staff who displayed moral courage in standing up to share information they had. It takes tremendous courage to stand up and, in essence, tell on your boss.  It's a hard thing to do.  It takes personal courage.  And they had it.  They took actions at great risk to themselves personally and professionally.  And I thank them.



Heaping praise on the AG staff  -- Commonwealth's witnesses - for their "moral courage" and "personal courage" also serves to prejudice the jury pool against Kane.  

According to Ferman, the following individuals had moral courage and took great professional risk:


1.  Adrian King -- the actual leaker of information who likely got immunity for putting the onus on Kane.


2.  James Barker -- who oversaw the AG's "leaky" investigative grand jury unit and was fired due to the unit's performance.


3. Bruce Beemer - who will likely become the AG if Kane is removed.  Talk about professional risk?


Around the 20 minute mark of the press conference, one (clueless) reporter asked Ferman,  


"Do you have a membership card in the Good Old Boy's Network in Harrisburg?


She responded by saying:  


"I don't think they've invited me."



Ferman was actually being truthful -- about Boys and Harrisburg.  


The Good Old Boy's Network doesn't just include men and it's not just in Harrisburg -- it's all across Pennsylvania.  One of the network's specialties is perverting the justice system to fit personal and/or political agendas.







The evidence in the Kane case strongly indicates that Montgomery County Judge, Risa Vetri Ferman used the Network's "playbook" and is part of the PA Corruption Network. 



Next: About that oath.


Wednesday, March 18

Spanier Complaint Details Freeh's Lies, Strikes Back at Frazier, Peetz, & Masser

Spanier's complaint not only exposed Freeh's lies, but seeks to expose his phony investigation racket.  It also struck back at PSU officials for parroting Freeh's groundless and defamatory findings -- in clear violation of Spanier's separation agreement.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 18, 2015
Contact: Libby Locke
Telephone: 202-628-7400
Email: press@clarelocke.com
Website: http://FreehReport.com



Former Penn State President Graham Spanier Files Defamation Complaint Against Louis Freeh

Suit asserts Freeh’s $8 million “Report” was a media-driven product that disregarded evidence and reached false and defamatory conclusions regarding Dr. Spanier

STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA – Dr. Graham Spanier, former President of Penn State University, filed a 140-page defamation complaint today against former FBI director Louis Freeh and his law firm, Freeh Sporkin & Sullivan LLP, in the Court of Common Pleas in Centre County, Pennsylvania. The case centers on false and defamatory statements made in the “Freeh Report,” which was commissioned by Penn State University’s Board of Trustees in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky scandal.

In the filing, Dr. Spanier alleges that Freeh and his law firm knowingly and maliciously published false and defamatory statements about him in the Freeh Report, causing significant damage to Dr. Spanier’s reputation – harm which was compounded by Freeh’s promotion of the report in a nationally televised press conference. The complaint alleges that Freeh recklessly disregarded evidence in the final report, including the results of a comprehensive federal investigation that vindicated Dr. Spanier. The complaint also alleges that the 267-page Freeh Report was virtually complete before Freeh ever interviewed Dr. Spanier, which occurred only four business days before the report was issued.

“Dr. Spanier’s complaint demonstrates that the Freeh Report was little more than a public relations product that expediently scapegoated a few individuals and was designed to knock the controversy out of the news as quickly as possible,” said Libby Locke, attorney for Dr. Spanier. “We intend to demonstrate in this suit that through misdirection and strategic omissions, the Freeh Report intentionally reached the false and defamatory conclusion that Dr. Spanier had knowledge of information and events that he did not.”

In the suit, Dr. Spanier seeks to reclaim his reputation and to establish Freeh’s liability for the substantial harm that Freeh and his law firm have caused. Dr. Spanier is asking a jury to award compensatory and punitive damages for the reputational and economic harm caused by Freeh’s defamatory statements.

Spanier’s complaint also brings claims for multiple breaches of contract by Penn State, including the University’s efforts to publicize the Freeh Report, disparaging statements about Dr. Spanier by certain members of the University’s Board of Trustees, and other breaches of Dr. Spanier’s separation agreement. The complaint also includes a count for tortious interference of business relations against Freeh Group International Solutions, LLC, Freeh’s consulting firm, for interfering with Dr. Spanier’s contracts to perform national security work for the federal government.

“We will show that the predetermined findings of the Freeh investigation were not supported by evidence or fact,” said Locke. “As a result, Dr. Spanier’s reputation was severely tarnished. He is filing this complaint today to prove that Freeh’s conclusions are false and defamatory and to restore the reputations of those who were falsely targeted by Freeh.”

Dr. Spanier is optimistic that this lawsuit also will shine a light on Freeh’s lucrative business model of purported “investigative reports” for his clients embroiled in controversy. In the case of Dr. Spanier, the Penn State Board of Trustees needed Freeh to assign blame for Sandusky’s behavior and to justify the hasty personnel decisions made in the aftermath of the Sandusky scandal. The Freeh Report falsely blamed Dr. Spanier, other University officials, and Coach Joe Paterno in a misguided effort to enable the University to compartmentalize responsibility for Sandusky’s conduct and to bring closure to the scandal. 

The lawsuit is Docket Number 2013-2707.

Further information about the lawsuit may be found here: http://FreehReport.com  

Wednesday, September 10

Barron Lied About "Civility" E-mail and PSU Hasn't Learned Anything Since 11/9/11

President Barron's statement that there was nothing behind his "civility" message was proven a lie on Monday.  It appears PSU hasn't learned anything about communicating since 11/9/11.

By
Ray Blehar

Penn State's response in the aftermath of the Sandusky scandal earned them the dubious distinction of being labeled at the worst public relations disasters of 2011 and 2012.   In those analyses, PSU was not only criticized for mangling the PR related to the scandal but for operating in secrecy.

Based on the message and video released by President Barron and then his follow up message, it appears that PSU still has not learned its lessons about either subject.  

Lesson 1 appears to be that any communication and decision from Old Main will be put under a microscope and weighed for its meaning, possible hidden meaning, and/or motivation. And if something negative can be gleaned from the message, it will be.

Lesson 2 appears to be the old adage, "those who don't know history are doomed to repeat it." 

Lesson 3 goes back to the original blunder made in the Sandusky scandal of being not being open and not controlling the narrative.

Lesson 4 is that Penn State alumni are not stupid and won't be taken in by the Administration's lies.

Barron's messages are just more examples of the PSU Administration not learning any of the lessons from the Sandusky scandal fallout. 

Lessons 1 (scrutiny):   Barron's first e-mail was subject to many interpretations. First, it was addressed "Dear Friends," it spoke in generalities, and, quite frankly, left many people scratching their heads over what it was he was trying to say.  

PSU spokesperson Lisa Powers stated there was no specific incident that triggered the message but there is a growing amount of incivility in communications nationwide and the begging of the semester seemed like the right time to address the issue.  However, part of Powers prepared statement said:

"Within our own University, we have seen disagreements that have been uncivil, and comments that are downright rude on some of the issues we have faced."

As a result, numerous media outlets took this not as a discussion of a "national issue" but focused on the disagreements within the University.  And of course, it was tied to the Sandusky scandal and the media immediately jumped on the alumni as the one's guilty of being uncivil.   Ironically, some of those criticizing the alumni, like Joel Mathis and Tom Ley  also were uncivil by calling us "crazy truthers."

Lesson hopefully learned?  Speak when you have something really important say and make sure the message is clear, otherwise it will be picked apart.  

Ironically, a January 2013 article in the Chicago Tribune cited PSU's PR firm Edelman's founder, Dan Edelman, when reporting on how trivial stories get elevated into something everyone is supposed to care about.
Barron: Disingenuous about intent of
the now infamous civility e-mail
However, given what transpired on Monday, President Barron (and Powers) were both disingenuous regarding the true intent of the letter. I suspect that the Board and the Administration knew that some, but not all, the sanctions would be reduced.  They also likely knew that Paterno's wins wouldn't be restored and apparently feared a backlash -- thus the admonitions about "incivility."

President Barron, I think your honeymoon may have just ended.




Lesson 2 (history):  Perhaps when President Barron was hired in February 2014, he, like most others outside PSU, didn't follow the scandal that closely and relied on initial reports to form the basis for his beliefs.  However, after his arrival PSU was criticized  for its siding with the NCAA in having the pre-trial documents sealed from the public in the Paterno, Et Al, vs. Paterno lawsuit.  In their argument to keep the documents sealed, the University stated that the Paterno family would try to use the documents "to influence public opinion."  

In his letter, Barron stated:

"We are likely never to have the full story. We are equally likely never to reach consensus."

Those two statements tell the world two things.  PSU will continue to resist "openness and transparency" about the scandal and that PSU is entrenched in its position.  It is clear that the Board, Administration, and PSU legal counsel, Steven Dunham have decided that whatever happened leading up to the Freeh Report and NCAA Consent Decree needs to be protected from public scrutiny. 

Alas, Barron, the Board, and the Administration are truly living in the past in sticking with their position to back the NCAA.  In July 2012 and for some time after that, they were in synch with the media in blaming the football program and athletics for the Sandusky debacle.  That has now changed to a chorus of NCAA detractors who now admit the ruling body of collegiate athletics overstepped its authority in punishing Penn State and in how it operates in general.


NCAA at breaking point?
Monday's roll back of the sanctions brought more heat down on the NCAA for overstepping its authority.  But it was just one more round in a long line of beatings that the NCAA has taken of late.   

The NCAA was criticized for its handling of the Miami (FL) and its North Carolina investigations.  In addition, it lost the O'Bannon case and in so doing lost its long-held, but false, admonition that it was focused on promoting the ideal of the student-athlete  precluded paying them.  Of course, the student-athlete argument fell apart in its punishment of PSU, who was, and still is, one of the role models for combining athletic and academic success.  

The bottom line is that Barron, et al, by continuing to on the path of siding with the NCAA, is doomed for failure.  

The writing is on the wall after Monday.

Lesson 3 (openness/narrative):  After getting the distinction of the worst PR disaster in 2011, in the spring of 2012, PSU hired David "No Comment" LaTorre to assist the PR team.  If there has been one thing singled out as the biggest failure among the PR staff it was the failure to take control of the narrative from the outset of the scandal.  In 2011, it was the PR shut down by John Surma at the outset of the scandal, then the Board's decisions to fire Paterno and Spanier that caused the PR disaster.

However, when other news breaks, those become opportunities to take control -- and that is something that LaTorre rarely if ever has done.  

As a result, 2012's PR was just as bad as 2011.  For example, when bits and pieces of emails were leaked in the press, PSU was not open or frank in discussing the emails and rightfully condemning the leaks.  PR spokesman David LaTorre didn't comment and instead stated the University would wait for the Freeh Report.  From PennLive:

La Torre only said that the administration and board are reserving comment until the report from an internal investigation — led by former FBI Director Louis Freeh — is released this summer.

Freeh Press Conference: An epic media
debacle brought to you by the PSU BOT
Of course, the Freeh Press conference ranked right up there with the grand jury presentment, in terms of generating negative publicity.  While the Board agreed to Freeh releasing his report without review, there was no requirement for Freeh to do so in front of a world-wide media audience.  Similarly, the Board's statements after release of the Freeh Report - before they had fully reviewed it -- obviously contributed to the disaster.  Had the board rebutted the report, as many, myself included, urged them to do, things may have turned out very differently.  Instead, no control of the narrative resulted in Business Insider citing the (unchallenged) Freeh Report in as the reason why PSU took the #1 position in 2012.  

The bad decisions, seemingly without thought of the message, continued into 2013 and 2014. Among the worst of the decisions was to consolidate the Sandusky crimes that were accumulated for a decade and a half and report them under a single year in its 2012 Clery Act Report.  This propelled PSU into the #1 spot for the number of sexual battery incidents on college campuses.   Again, PSU spokesperson Lisa Powers commented that the University didn't mind the extra scrutiny if others could learn from our example.   Quite frankly, there are a lot of other things Penn State does very well, such as academic support for athletes, that would have been a far better choice to promote than the University's inept decisions in filling out a Clery Act report.

Which brings us back to the Barron communications and that there could have been little thought given to what narrative would be written as a result of them.  And, as a result, the narrative that emanated was that PSU has a "civility" problem.

Lesson 4 (underestimating the audience).  It is hard to fathom why the Board and the Administration believe that they can make ridiculous statements to the alumni and PSU community in general and think that the well-educated group of people are simply going to believe whatever they say.   For goodness sakes, most of us were educated at PSU.  


Peetz and Frazier: Emails obtained via RTK reveal
disdain for alumni and Paterno's accomplishments
Does the Administration and Board really have that much disrespect for the academic prowess of the University?   I don't think so.

The communications emanating from Old Main are controlled by a small group of people, who had great disdain for the football program and athletics in general. Those people happily drove the "culture" message and continue to push the idea that those who want to fight  for the reputation of the University -- and the full truth being exposed -- are somehow living in the past.

On Monday, University's self-congratulatory statement on sanctions reductions was a bitter pill for many alumni to swallow, as it reinforced the narrative that there were improvements needed to improve the "integrity" of athletics at PSU.  

"The NCAA Executive Committee has modified the Penn State football bowl and scholarship limitations previously imposed by the consent decree between the University and the NCAA. The action comes following today's release of another positive annual report and recommendations by Sen. George Mitchell, the independent, third-party athletics integrity monitor for Penn State."

As I noted in yesterday's blog, Mitchell reported that the recommendations for the AIA were completed in November 2013.  And in a previous blog, I demonstrated that most of the so-called improvements were not needed based on PSU's outstanding track record for compliance and academic success.  The alumni and PSU community know the athletic integrity issue was and is a farce.

Similarly, BOT chair Keith Masser's self-congratulatory statement also was rooted in the false narrative that the University was in dire need of reform.

"This report is a welcome acknowledgement of the University's efforts," said Board of Trustees Chair Keith Masser. "Such a massive undertaking has made Penn State a national model in an array of university functions - including compliance, safety and security. I commend President Barron and his predecessor, Rodney Erickson, for their tremendous leadership throughout this process. The Board of Trustees is committed to the continued monitoring and improvement of university policies, procedures and actions."

The fact of the matter was and is that it was (and still is) the Board of Trustees that was in need of reform and that the majority of the "improvements" made in the past two years were akin to rearranging the deck chairs on the titanic.   

Additionally, the report by Mitchell that all recommendations were completed is false.  To wit:

Freeh Report Recommendation 3.3 Board of Trustee Restructuring was reported complete as of June 2012.  Mitchell reports about this ongoing effort on pages 52, 54, and 55 of his latest report.

Freeh Report Recommendation 1.6 is Openess and Transparency and was reported as "ongoing and continuous."  If Mitchell was doing his job as an honest monitor, he would have  stated that this is one of the greatest areas for improvement and is far, far from complete.

These are just two examples, however, they are emblematic of the Administration's and Board's failure to understand that its alumni are intelligent and resourceful individuals who will hold them to account when they are being untruthful about the issues related to the Sandusky scandal and its aftermath.

Conclusion
The history of the bad decisions resulting from the Sandusky scandal and the bad publicity from those decisions, lead many people to believe that there is something far worse being hidden by the University.   

Barron's own words also appear to indicate that the truth will never be known.  However, the fact of the matter is beyond the control of the University.  It is in the of the courts and the criminal justice system. 

When the truth is revealed, it is very likely that PSU will be ensnared in another scandal -- if it continues on its current PR path.



Sunday, July 13

Patriot News Preview

This blogpost is one of a 9-part series that will expose the lies and deceptions of the Patriot News' coverage of the Sandusky scandal.  I will be making releases between now and August 2, 2014.

By
Ray Blehar

I considered the review of The Patriot News’  (P-N) coverage of the Sandusky scandal to be a rather low priority in terms of importance in reviewing this case.   However, once I began reviewing its coverage, I realized that that the P-N was covering up information critical to understanding what really happened in the Sandusky scandal.  In a few instances, I found that the P-N deleted a considerable amount of information that was potentially damaging to Governor Corbett and The Second Mile (TSM) in its free on-line coverage.  

While I am not certain when the P-N began deleting information, I suspect that it was some time after Kathleen Kane won the election as Attorney General and had made good on her promise to investigate the Sandusky investigation.

A blogpost I authored on August 21, 2012, titled “Mother of Victim 6: “This whole thing stinks so much more than we all know,” contained a link to a January 8, 2012 P_N column that published the mother’s quote and a lot of other information that raised questions about the Sandusky investigation.  When I clicked on the link a few months ago, I saw that the information I was seeking was missing.   I was able to track down a cached version[1] of the original article as well as find it copied on a blog.  Nearly 1,000 words were removed from the article that revealed evidence of foot-dragging on prosecuting and investigative missteps in the Sandusky case.

Similarly, Eileen Morgan asked me to find a quote made by TSM's Katherine Genovese, who revealed:  We’ve had to tell him to back off certain kids before.”  This quote was originally reported by the P-N on August 12, 2012, but was removed from an updated version of the column.   I was able to locate the full quote in an August 14, 2012 article by the Non Profit Quarterly as well as on about a half dozen blogs.  I later found the full article on a Yahoo blog and discovered 1,400 words were removed that were related to potential wrong-doing by the charity and the charity's ties to Governor Corbett.

While I didn’t review every article written on the scandal, I reviewed their Pulitzer winning articles and other articles related to the Department of Public Welfare, Centre County Children and Youth Services, the 2008-2011 investigation, TSM, and the Sandusky trial.  This analysis spans approximately 150 pages and contains 30,000 words.  In other words, it is meticulously detailed and contains references that prove the P-N's coverage obfuscated critical facts, was overly biased, was incomplete (omitted critical information), contained falsehoods and at least one outright fabrication

To be fair, I assessed the quality and accuracy of the writing based on the sources which were at the disposal of the authors at the time the article was written.  These errors should have been corrected by the editors before the article went to press.  It is also notable that when information surfaced that proved information in their past columns to be erroneous, the P-N did not make corrections.  

This review was very similar to other reviews I have conducted regarding the Sandusky case.  The more I  looked, the more I found.  And what I found was that the P-N used its power of omission (among other techniques) to promote a false narrative of a "Penn State sex scandal."







[1]http://www.policeprostitutionandpolitics.com/pdfs_all/CHILD%20MOLESTATION%20PORNOGRAPHY%20TEACHERS%20ETC/Sports%20figures/Jerry%20Sandusky%20all/Jerry%20Sandusky's%20book,%20'Touched,'%20helped%20police%20investigation%20into%20alleged%20sex%20crimes%20%7C%20PennLive.com.pdf

Sunday, August 4

Preliminary Hearing Transcript Highlights (from Twitter)

Here is a recap of some of the more interesting information I tweeted when reading the preliminary hearing transcripts.    I will provide more in-depth analysis as time permits -- because there are other parts of Mike's testimony that were inconsistent with his previous testimony.




PSU COMPLIED WITH SUBPOENA FOR E-MAIL....Where is the obstruction?



  1. pg80/Day 1/Corro: 1st asked to retrieve e-mail in April 2011 - subpoena 1179 was issued in Oct 2010 req e-mail/docs.



Note:  Baldwin asked for these e-mails in advance of Spanier's grand jury testimony.



SCHULTZ SECRET FILE UNRAVELS

  1. Pg. 32/Sassano states firm of Duane Morris went through Schultz's files - provided billing record of WC after November 2011
  1. Pg 77/Day 1/Belcher: "He (Fina) did not believe I was telling the truth." "He was looking for me to say that" Schultz told me to take file
  2. pg 77/Day 1/Belcher: Schultz rtned to work in Sept 2011 & never mentioned Sandusky investigation. Belcher unaware of any subpoenas

  1. Coble didn't know when file originated. That's the story. Also didn't know purpose of mtgs she scheduled for Gary.
  2. Pg. 66 Day 1 Belcher: FREEH BUSTED! Belcher and Schultz provided files to OAG in April. No "skill and luck" by Freeh group.
  3. Yes. It was a weak line up on Monday. No one above the Mendoza line....except McQ - whose lies were on steroids.

THE SCHULTZ SECRET FILE WAS NOT A SECRET
  1. Pg. 27 Day 1 Coble: Master list named every file in the bottom drawer. List distributed to entire staff. Some secret!
  2. Pg. 24/25 Day 1 Coble: Sandusky still active coach when Schultz told her about file. Can't recall when. Maybe 5 years b4 JS retired?


  1. TOM HARMON's TESTIMONY WAS.......INCREDIBLE

    1. Pg 144/Day 1/Harmon: Tho he can't remember riot and HUB takeover says he would have remembered the 2001 shower incident - if told
  2. Pg 143/Day 1/Harmon: No recollection of Schultz asking for the 1998 police file or of him providing it to Schultz. ?
  3. Harmon on riot/HUB takeover: "Again, I would have to have something to refresh my recollection on that." Recalls JS shower, but not riot.
  4. Pg 123/Day 1/Harmon: States Schultz should have recalled 1998 incident but Harmon can't recall a riot and take over the HUB ?
  1. Pg 116/Day 1/Harmon: Schultz note (previously unseen by public) correctly states DPW involved due to Second Mile providing youth services.
  2. Pg 116/Day 1/Harmon: Schultz note (previously unseen by public) says psychologist provided report to DPW. Confirms J. Lauro is a liar.
  3. Page 80/Day 1/Harmon > Although regional office for DPW is in Cresson, PA, a regional program representative from HARRISBURG to investigate
Note:  I suspected something was not quite right with "high profile" program representative Jerry Lauro's involvement in the case.  Perhaps we should call him Jerry "the fixer" Lauro -- as he was sent in to "fix" the Sandusky problem.