Posted on 05/08/2015 10:23:32 AM PDT by Citizen Zed
Attorneys for the Paterno estate have been fighting tooth-and-nail for months to subpoena the Pepper Hamilton law firm for an undisclosed number of documents gathered during Freeh's investigation into the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal.
Pepper Hamilton (which acquired Freehs law firm through a merger in 2012) fought just as hard to keep those documents out of Centre County court, appealing several of Judge John Leete's decisions that overturned the firm's objections. But Leete refused to put the case on hold for those appeals, and now he's issued an order directing Pepper Hamiltion to turn over the documents within the next 30 days.
Leete's order is the latest twist in the legal fight between the Paterno estate and the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
The plaintiffs in the suit -- which includes the Paterno estate, former Penn State assistant football coaches Jay Paterno and William Kenney and former university trustee Al Clemens -- first filed their suit against the NCAA in May 2013. They argue that the NCAA overstepped its authority in the aftermath of the Sandusky child sex abuse scandal, ultimately decreasing the value of the Paterno estate and making it more difficult for Jay Paterno and Kenney to find work.
Pepper Hamilton is entangled in the case because it acquired the law firm of Freeh, Sporkin and Sullivan in 2012. Freeh and his team of investigators were hired by Penn State in 2011 to determine what actions or inactions allowed the Sandusky scandal to unfold. The Freeh Report was released in 2012, and ultimately formed the basis for the NCAA's punitive sanctions against Penn State.
“I guess it ain’t over yet. “
It’s over.
Freeh made a tragedy worse. I hope, when the dust settles, Paterno is not only vindicated but the family sues Freeh for millions.
Louis’ karma is coming. And it’s going to hit hard.
Too late, the docs have already been shredded.
What exactly do you think was left out of the Freeh report?
It looked pretty damning to me (perhaps it was short of legal proof that Paterno knew), but JoePa did ask enough questions to be suspicious and (why else other than deliberately?) stopped asking questions before he could be certain.
“What exactly do you think was left out of the Freeh report?”
It wasn’t necessarily what was left out; it was unsubstantiated stuff that was put in. To believe the report is to believe that a guy that lived by and asked athletes to live by a moral and ethical code over decades purposefully looked the other way for his own benefit.
I don’t think he was a saint, I just don’t believe he was a hypocrite. Especially when Freeh is the accuser.
The e-mail containing Paterno’s second hand question was damning enough for me. There is no that the e-mail was sent.
Your choice. Trust Freeh and a “second hand email” to come to the conclusion that Paterno would think child rape could be covered up to protect himself and the college football program (the antithesis of decades of behavior), which makes him a total hypocrite, or like me have doubts that this scenario is what actually happened.
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