Posted on 11/08/2011 11:40:43 AM PST by bjorn14
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. Joe Paternos tenure as coach of the Penn State football team will soon be over, perhaps within days or weeks, in the wake of a sex-abuse scandal that has implicated university officials, according to two people briefed on conversations among the universitys top officials.
The board of trustees has yet to determine the precise timing of Paternos exit, but it is clear that the man who has more victories than any other coach at college footballs top level and who made Penn State a prestigious national brand will not survive to coach another season. Discussions about how to manage his departure have begun, according to the two people.
Paterno was to have held a news conference Tuesday but the university canceled it less than an hour before it was scheduled to start.
At age 84 and with 46 seasons as the Penn State head coach behind him, Paternos extraordinary run of success one that produced tens of millions of dollars for the school and two national championships, and that established him as one of the nations most revered leaders, will end with a stunning and humiliating final chapter.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
That is why Curley is being charged with not reporting the offense. He did NOT report it to the police.
I lived in a college football town for a few years, and I can tell you, the coach and anybody he annointed could have been out raping women and children all over town and nobody would have said a word about it.
So you're saying that Paterno saw Sandusky take these kids to the showers? Why do you think that?
*sigh*
In my profession, I have to read documents like the Grand Jury presentment and the Grand Jury findings at least twice. Always at least twice.
Once, to see what is in them. A second time, to see what isn't in them.
it's like working on a large jig-saw puzzle. Initially, you look at the pieces and put them together based on what's there and what the look like. Next, you look at the holes in the completed puzzle and fit pieces based on what's not there.
In this case, it's when I read the documents looking for what was not there that I became ill. Because I respected Joe Paterno.
I'll state it one more time.
The documents meticulously follow the link of conversations among four men: McQueary, Paterno, Curley, and Schultz. What one claims to have said to the second, and what the second claims to have been told from the first. In the case of one meeting among McQueary, Curley, and Schultz, they detail what McQueary says he said, what Curley said he was told, and what Schultz says he was told.
Out of all of the meetings, from the time McQueary called his father through his multiple meetings with Paterno, Curley, and Schultz, and meetings between Curley and Schultz, and those involving the Penn State President . . . there is one conversation that everybody avoids as if it radioactive.
If this is a jigsaw puzzle, the puzzle is complete except for one piece.
Nobody will address what McQueary told the investigators that he told Paterno.
There's this long chain that starts with McQueary's call to his father . . . and only one link is missing in both the presentment and findings. What did McQueary tell the investigators that he told Paterno? McQueary may not have been asked that specific question before the grand jury, on purpose. The presentment suggests it wasn't part of the DA's evidence. The findings suggest the grand jury wasn't told.
Because it was common knowledge that Sandusky frequently brought little boys into Joe's locker room. At some time, Joe must have seen Sandusky.
Not required for the indictments since McQueary eventually talked directly to Curley and Schultz. (keep some ammo dry). AND Joe has agreed to testify against Curley and Schultz.
I believe it could be possible for Sandusky to have avoided Paterno based on Paterno’s patterns of behavior. I’m just saying it’s possible.
are deals ever made regarding what questions are asked?
Or not asked?
I am not aware of what you are referring to.
I thank you for your well thought out post.
I've got a sick feeling about the whole thing. I've read almost every article that's been written about this incident but I've yet to read the entire GJ report. I'll force myself to do it after the kid goes to bed.
I'm not sure Sandusky's retirement was forced on him as a result of the 1998 report as you insinuate?
It is my understanding that he (the monster) negotiated the terms of his retirement (access to campus, office, etc.) with the administration, not with Paterno.
I'm still willing to hear what Joe has to say (they're trying to quiet him) before I throw him away.
and yet...it certainly IS an important question regarding Joe’s involvement? is it not?
Because....if McQueary did indeed tell Joe exactly what he saw...then Joe downplayed it to his superiors.
I sincerely apologize for that remark.
A Buckeye is an Ohio State fan.
I'm really sick over this. Please accept.
Joe knew about the 1998 incident that happened in Joe's locker room. He remained silent.
The staff in the locker room remained silent because they were afraid of losing their jobs if they said anything. Joe was in on the cover-up of the 2002 molestation. Throw him away. He has now made a deal with the prosecutors to testify against all his old buddies if (mercy on his soul) he can survive that long.
I’m guessing that Paterno shows up for work at a certain time every day and that he does the same routine week in and week out. I believe it is possible that Joe Paterno never ran into Sandusky when Sandusky was in the gym or showers or wherever. It may not be the case. I really don’t know Paterno’s habits. I don’t know much about him at all other than Bama won some great games against his teams. And that he’s pretty much deaf and blind.
Maybe because the University might be sued? Schultz was the Senior Vice President of Business and Finance.
One of the department that reported to him was the University Police. Neither Schultz nor Curley (nor Paterno nor McQueary) ever reported the 2002 incident to the University Police or any law enforcement or child protective agency. Neither Schultz nor Curley (nor Paterno nor McQueary) ever tried to find out the name of the child anally raped in the Penn State football showers.
The apologists who say that Schultz was the head of the Penn State police are simply wrong. The head of the Penn State University Police reported to Schultz. The head of the FBI may report to Barack Obama, but that doesn't make Barack Obama the head of the FBI.
Schultz was there in a CYA mode. And he did so effectively . . . for nine years.
Agreed. Joe is cooperating. Curley, Schultz and Spanier are not. Joe gets the pass at this time because he is:
1. Eighty-seven years old and holds the record for most victories in NCAA football.
2. He has a nice wife and family.
3. He has agreed to testify.
4. He is not officially an officer of the school.
5. He has agreed to testify.
so, the question everyone wants to know the answer to, will be resolved, pretty much.....never.
However, McQueary met directly with Curley and Schultz. That, legally and technically, removes Joe from the picture since he had reported the incident to an officer of the school (Curley).
Please read what you just wrote.
You're accusing an honest and decent man (Joe Paterno) of sodomizing little kids.
Get real man.
I was just kidding about the Buckeye thing.
almost
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