Posted on 09/11/2014 4:30:58 PM PDT by FlJoePa
A Centre County Court of Common Pleas judgment was posted by the prothonotarys office Thursday, giving the Paterno family and its co-filers the news they had been waiting for.
Plaintiffs have standing to challenge the consent decree, the court documents said.
Judge John Leetes 39-page decision is based on arguments made earlier this year in the case brought by the Paternos, four members of the Penn State board of trustees, four members of the university faculty, and former football players and coaches against the NCAA and Penn State regarding the consent decree, the contract that led to the historic sanctions against Penn State after the Jerry Sandusky scandal.
The order, dated Wednesday, overrules seven of the NCAAs objections and sustains three.
It is also worth noting that this case is unique, the judge said in his decision. The alleged harm does not come from an action, duty or relationship resulting from the consent decree, but instead is derived from the language in the document itself. The court finds this distinguishing characteristic alone also warrants plaintiffs standing to challenge the consent decree.
The court also dismissed the NCAAs claims that the estate, not being part of the consent decree, cannot contest it.
To claim the plaintiffs do not have standing to bring suit against NCAA for not following their own rules because NCAA did not follow their own rules is circuitous logic, which the court finds to be contrary to the interest of justice, the documents claim.
One victory for the NCAA was the dismissal of a number of parties from the suit. Trustees Anthony Lubrano, Ryan McCombie and Adam Taliaferro; former Nittany Lions Anthony Adams, Gerald Cadogan, Shamar Finney, Justin Kurpeikis, Richard Gardner, Josh Gaines, Patrick Mauti, Anwar Phillips and Michael Robinson; and faculty members Peter Bordi, Terry Engelder, Spencer Niles and John ODonnell were removed.
Scott Paterno was removed in his listing as a duly appointed representative of the estate and family of Joseph Paterno. The estate, instead, was directly named as a party.
The NCAA also lost its attempt to quash certain statements as opinions that could be protected against defamation claims. Instead, the court looked to the wording of the consent decree itself, directly quoting passages from the Findings and Conclusions section of the document. In one place, the consent decree states what the judge pointed to as definitive of the issue: ... the findings of the criminal jury and the Freeh report establish a factual basis from which the NCAA concludes that Penn State breached the standards ...
Because the statements at issue are conclusions, as opposed to opinions ... they are not protected, the decision said.
Other major developments included a list of Penn States objections to plaintiff requests for discovery materials being overruled. Key among those was the courts decision that the university cannot claim that all communications with the Freeh Group International, authors of the commissioned investigation of the incident, can be protected.
Further, the scope of an attorney-client privilege waiver applies to the subject matter of the privileged documents disclosed. Therefore, voluntary disclosure waives the privilege as to remaining documents of that same subject matter, Leete said.
The decision cited any documents shared with the Big Ten or NCAA regarding failures in reporting, knowledge of allegations and how those allegations were handled as constituting waiver of privilege.
Other objections, including Penn States claims that plaintiff requests were costly, vague, invasive or irrelevant, were overruled. The university won on some claims, such as certain protections of information on arrests and indictments.
The court also agreed that the 3.5 million documents available was too broad of a scope. Plaintiffs were asked to narrow that field to a more reasonable number.
Today was a very good day for those of us interested in learning the truth, Lubrano said. The fact that I have been removed is irrelevant. This has never been about me. This is about due process and the rule of law. My hope is that the plaintiffs in this lawsuit prevail so that the likes of Mark Emmert and the NCAA never again can illegally impose their will on another institution.
Penn State had no comment on the decision.
Well, then you weren't looking, because in fact that is the position taken by the lawyers for the defendants. That's right: Freeh/NCAA/PSU BOT tried to keep the conclusions of Freeh's report out of this case on the basis that they were nothing but opinions.
So you'd better huddle with your legal team counselor. Because they've been arguing that this was nothing but a baseless diatribe all along.
Whatever the case, that's going to be determined by a trier-of-fact. Sue Paterno and the other plaintiffs have been arguing that Freeh's baseless diatribe was presented as if it were factual, and they have been fighting to force Freeh to back his dubious "conclusions" up.
Now, they are going to get the chance. And Freeh won't be able to claim that his baseless diatribe was just a baseless diatribe any longer.
Freeh/NCAA/PSU BOT tried to keep the conclusions of Freeh’s report out of this case on the basis that they were nothing but opinions.
So you’d better huddle with your legal team counselor. Because they’ve been arguing that this was nothing but a baseless diatribe all along.
...thanks for the valuable info, Fred...never knew that ‘opinions’ and ‘baseless diatribe’ were synonymous...
...but all levity aside, just curious, Fred...why the chip on your shoulder...? Why do you feel the need to refer to someone that might draw one or two different conclusions than you as a fool and a know-nothing...?
You wrote this upthread: ...ah yes, you dont like what they said, so theyve lied...just like the victims, right...nothing but a bunch of liars and cheats, according to some...
This is a despicable mischaracterization, and you were called out on it. NO ONE has said the victims lied. NO ONE. Freeh is a political fixer who was called in to protect the PSU Board of Trustees, not an innocent kid who was sexually assaulted by a depraved predator. His report was used to defame and destroy the reputation of a good man, against whom no evidence whatsoever has ever been presented. If you don't understand why that makes people angry, then don't post snarky, rude comments on the thread. And don't then try to back away from them after you've been pwned.
Thats right.Up to the point of the Sandusky allegations - about which a jury didnt express any doubt - Joe Paternos reputation was an ornament of Penn State University. And I was impressed with the loyalty of Franco Harris et al. Including FlJoePa.So I am, quite literally, very interested in finding out if Joe Pa was railroaded while he was in his terminal illness. If not, It is what it is. But if so, a Philipians 4:8 story has been suppressed by the media. And it is my settled opinion that cynicism about Philipians 4:8 stories, rather than truth-telling, is actually what journalists do for a living.
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