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  • 13
    Jun
    2012
    12:01pm, EDT

    Alleged victim testifies Sandusky threatened him unless he kept quiet

    Pprosecutors used Jerry Sandusky's own words in an interview with NBC's Bob Costas on the third day of his trial. NBC's John Yang reports from Bellefonte, Pa.

    By Kimberly Kaplan, NBC News, and M. Alex Johnson, msnbc.com

    Updated at 7 p.m ET: Jurors heard more graphic testimony Wednesday in the trial of former Penn State University assistant coach Jerry Sandusky, including testimony from an alleged victim who said Sandusky threatened that he would be cut off from his family if he told anyone about their sexual relationship.

    Thomas Roberts of MSNBC-TV contributed to this report by Kimberly Kaplan of NBC News and M. Alex Johnson of msnbc.com. Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    The 25-year-old man, identified in the indictment as "Victim 10," said Sandusky performed oral sex on him "and vice versa" in the Sandusky home in 1998, when he was in the seventh grade. 

    "He said if I told anyone, I would never see my family again," the man said. Sandusky then apologized and said "he loved me," the man said, adding that he remained silent about incidents until last year "because I was scared, I was ashamed (and) I was embarrassed."


    Although Sandusky's accusers are being identified by name in court, NBC News and msnbc.com do not identify victims of sexual assaults.

    Sandusky, 68, the former longtime defensive coordinator at Penn State, denies all 52 counts alleging that he abused 10 boys over 15 years. Two grand jury reports accused him of having used his connection to one of the nation's premier college football programs to "groom" the boys, whom he met through his Second Mile charity for troubled children, for sexual relationships.

    It was the third straight day that jurors in Bellefonte, Pa., heard disturbingly graphic descriptions of Sandusky's alleged pedophilia. Two of the alleged victims testified Wednesday, and three more alleged victims are scheduled to testify.

    A 27-year-old man identified in the indictment as "Victim 7" testified that Sandusky, whom he first met in 1995 as a young boy, would grab him around the knees "and then eventually he would move his hand up my leg."

    "If I was wearing shorts, his hands would go up my leg towards my groin area," he said. If he was wearing longer pants, he said, Sandusky would reach in and "touch my penis." 

    Full coverage of the Jerry Sandusky trial

    Legal analysis by Wes Oliver

    Sandusky gave the boy tickets to Penn State football games for more than a dozen years, beginning in 1997, he said.


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    The man testified that he didn't tell his story until last year because "it was just something I didn't want my family or anyone to know. I just figured I'll keep it to myself and I get to to go to these games, so I'll push that part to the back of my mind."

    A 23-year-old man identified in the indictment as "Victim 5" later testified that Sanduskey exposed himself to him in a Penn State sauna in summer 2001 and afterward groped him as they were taking a shower.

    The man said he tried to get away from Sandusky, "but I didn't have anywhere more to go, and I just felt his penis on my back ... and I felt his arm move forward, and he touched my area — my genitalia — and then he took my hand and he placed it on his," said the man, who had to stop several times to fight back tears.

    The man said he didn't tell anyone about the incident until last year because "I wanted to forget and I was embarrassed."

    Defense attorneys spent much of their cross-examination questioning the three men on details of their alleged encounters with Sandusky, part of a strategy to raise questions about whether the alleged victims — some of whom have sued the university or have said they plan to sue Sandusky — are making up their stories for financial gain.

    Jurors hear interview
    After a conference at the bench, Judge John Cleland allowed prosecutors to play the audio of Sandusky's interview last November on the NBC News program "Rock Center."

    Sandusky had little visible reaction as he heard himself deny the charges aginst him and tell NBC News' Bob Costas that he wasn't sexually attracted to young boys.

    Following is the full interview:

    Jerry Sandusky spoke to NBC's Bob Costas on "Rock Center" in November.

    Wendy Murphy, a lawyer in Boston and former child sex crimes prosecutor, said playing the interview was a way for the chief defense attorney, Joseph Amendola, to let jurors hear Sandusky deny the charges without having to put him on the stand. 

    "Amendola is not a dummy. He knows he had to get Sandusky on the record in some form that he could then use at trial denying guilt because he knew he could never put him on the stand," Murphy told MSNBC-TV's Thomas Roberts. 

    Jurors also heard from the father of another former Penn State assistant coach, Michael McQueary, who testified Tuesday that he witnessed Sandusky molesting a young boy in a football team shower in 2001. McQueary said he called his father, the chief executive of a medical group in State College, where Penn State is based, the night of the incident.

    John McQueary testified that he advised his son to inform his immediate superior, head coach Joe Paterno, which both McQuearys said he did the next day.

    Michael McQueary testified Tuesday that he had "no doubt" that he saw Sandusky engaging in anal sex with the boy, but his father testified that his son told him that he didn't see any "penetration."

    Regardless, John McQueary said, it was "without question ... my conclusion" that his son did see Sandusky committing "a sexual act."

    For the second straight day, defense attorneys appeared surprised by developments in the day's testimony.

    Karl Rominger, one of Sandusky's lawyers, began questioning McQueary about testimony he gave in Dauphin County, Pa., in December.

    But McQueary said he wasn't there, and when Rominger asked him to identify his testimony in the transcript, he said, "I was not in that courthouse to my knowledge."

    It seemed a remarkable failure of memory by McQueary about public testimony he gave just seven months ago, perhaps because Rominger mischaracterized the hearing when he first asked about it, calling it "this other grand jury in Dauphin County."

    McQueary's testimony came not before a grand jury but during a preliminary hearing in the criminal case against two former top Penn State officials, who are charged with perjury in connection with the Sandusky case.

    Analysis: Sandusky lawyer flummoxed by witness' failure of memory

    Read the full transcript of the December 2011 hearing (.pdf)

    The final witness of the day was a Penn State physical plant worker who testified that one night he saw "one set of hairy legs and one set of skinny legs" in the showers. 

    Shortly thereafter, Sandusky and a small boy emerged, and "I said, 'Good evening, Coach,'" said the man, Ronald Petrovsky.

    After a long bench conference, Petrovsky was allowed to testify that he later talked to Penn State janitor who also had seen the incident and was severely shaken. 

    Cleland said Petrovsky's testimony would usually be considered hearsay, but he allowed it under an exception that permits retelling of "excited utterances." The prosecution said the janitor, Jim Calhoun, was unavailable to testify because he has dementia.

    The trial, which opened Monday in Centre County Court, is the result of months of intense coverage that led to the firing of Paterno, a college football legend who won more games than any other major college coach in history. Sandusky, who was at his side for many of those victories, was for many years presumed to be Paterno's heir apparent.

    Paterno died in January, a few weeks after the Penn State Board of Trustees dismissed him for not having done enough to stop Sandusky's alleged abuse.

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    405 comments

    I want to see this sick f@ck rot in jail, but reading this testimony is difficult, I have a young son and there is no way Sandusky would be alive if he did this to my child, if that sounds harsh, it is!

    Show more
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  • 12
    Jun
    2012
    9:35am, EDT

    Ex-coach McQueary testifies 'no doubt' he saw Sandusky having sex with young boy

    An 18-year-old known in court documents as 'Victim 1' described meeting Jerry Sandusky through his Second Mile charity. NBC's John Yang reports from Bellefont, Pa.

    By Kimberly Kaplan, NBC News, and M. Alex Johnson, msnbc.com

    Updated at 6:49 p.m. ET: Michael McQueary, a former assistant football coach at Penn State University, testified Tuesday that he had "no doubt" that he saw Jerry Sandusky having sex with a young boy in the team's showers.

    John Yang, Hannah Rappleye and Tom Winter of NBC News contributed to this report by Kimberly Kaplan of NBC News and M. Alex Johnson of msnbc.com. Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    McQueary, 37 — a key witness in Sandusky's child sexual abuse trial but one whose testimony has been characterized as varying and hard to reconcile — was on the prosecution's witness list but hadn't been expected to testify until Wednesday at the earliest.

    Sandusky, 68, the former longtime defensive coordinator at Penn State, denies all 52 counts alleging that he abused 10 boys over 15 years. Two grand jury reports accused him of having used his connection to one of the nation's premier college football programs to "groom" the boys, whom he met through his Second Mile charity for troubled children, for sexual relationships.


    McQueary — a graduate assistant coach at the time who later became a full-time staff member — testified that he had returned to the football team's facilities late on a Friday night to retrieve some tapes when he heard "showers running and smacking sounds — very much skin-on-skin smacking sounds."

    Legal analysis: Sandusky defense fails to dent McQueary's damning testimony

    Full coverage of the Jerry Sandusky trial

    McQueary said he could see the shower area through a mirror. As he opened his locker, he said, he saw "Coach Sandusky standing behind a boy who is propped up behind the shower. The shower is running, and he is right up against" the back of the boy, who was propped up against the wall leaning on his hands.

    Sandusky's arms were "wrapped around the boy's midsection in the very, very closest proximity that I thought you could be in," McQueary said.

    During the first day of his sexual-abuse trial, an alleged victim of Jerry Sandusky testified Monday about "horsing around" that he said eventually turned into five years of sexual abuse. NBC's Michael Isikoff reports from Bellefonte, Pa.

    McQueary slammed his locker shut "as loud as I could to make a loud sound," he said. "I made it in an attempt, I think, to say, 'OK, someone's here, break it up please.'"

    When he went back to take a second look, "both individuals were separated," he said.

    NBC: Former Penn State president could face charges in Sandusky case

    Asked by Joseph McGettigan, the deputy state attorney general who is prosecuting the case, whether he believed Sandusky was engaging in anal sex with the boy, McQueary said: "I thought i saw that, yes. No doubt about that."

    McQueary's account has been contested because he initially testified at a hearing last year that he believed the incident occurred in March 2002, while prosecutors say it actually occurred on Feb. 9, 2001 — more than a year earlier.

    McQueary said Tuesday he may have been mistaken and that "I really do believe it was 2001," as the prosecution contends. Questioned intensely about the discrepancy under cross-examination, he said, "I have no problem saying that I'm not a perfect individual."

    McQueary has also been criticized for not having done more to put a stop to Sandusky's alleged abuse. He defended himself on that count Tuesday, saying was shocked and "wasn't thinking 100 percent right."

    "I'm used to pressure situations, and I can say that was more than my brain could handle at that time," he said.

    MSNBC's Thomas Roberts and NBC News' John Yang discuss an emotional second day of testimony in the sex abuse trial of former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky.

    McQueary said he told his father that night. The next day, he went to head coach Joe Paterno's home and "made sure Coach Joe knew it was sexual and it was wrong, and there was no doubt about that."

    McQueary was blocked from telling the jury what Paterno — who died earlier this year — told him, because it would be hearsay.

    Wesley Oliver, a Widener University law professor and legal analyst for NBC News and msnbc.com, said the defense tried to demonstrate in the first two days of testimony that the alleged victims have been coached to implicate Sandusky and have financial motives to make up their accounts.

    But "if Mike McQueary saw Sandusky in the shower with a young boy in a compromising position — and the jury will not doubt that he did after Tuesday's testimony — then it seems much less likely that these young men are motivated by greed or prosecutorial influence," Oliver said.

    Alleged victim tells of continued abuse
    Sandusky's trial entered its second day Tuesday in Bellefonte, Pa., with testimony from the 18-year-old man identified in court papers as "Victim 1." The Central Mountain High School student said Sandusky began repeatedly sexually abusing him when he was in middle school..

    Although Sandusky's accusers are being identified by name in court, NBC News and msnbc.com do not identify the victims of sexual assaults.

    The young man testified that he stayed overnight at Sandusky's house more than 100 times in 2005 and 2006.

    "At first, it was — he would kiss me on the forehead good night, and then it — then it came to him kissing me on the cheek, then rubbing my back, then pulling me on top of him and rubbing my back," the young man said, pausing a couple times to collect himself.

    Eventually, the behavior progressed to "back massages, hand down the back of my shorts — the same thing, except this time he, he sat there and looked at me and said something along the lines of 'it's your turn,' and he, he made me, he made me put my mouth on his privates," the man continued, by now crying openly and wiping his face.

    That started when he was "close to going onto 13," he said.

    Once the young man entered high school, Sandusky — who volunteered as a football coach there — would sometimes have him pulled out class for visits in a school conference room, he said. On one occasion, he alleged, Sandusky even followed his school bus so he could intercept him on the way home to demand an explanation for why the young man was avoiding him.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The experience was so traumatic, he said, that "I acted out. I started wetting the bed. I got into fights with people and stuff I would never normally do."

    Jessica Dersham, a case worker with Clinton County Children and Youth Services, testified that in a meeting with Sandusky, who was accompanied by an attorney, the coach "admitted to blowing raspberries on his stomach, laying on him to crack his back" — which the young man said was a wrestler's way to loosen the back muscles — and "rubbing his back."

    She said Sandusky couldn't recall whether his hand went under the boy's pants but insisted that he never had any sexual contact or "intent."

    The trial, which opened Monday in Centre County Court, is the result of months of breathless coverage that led to the firing of Paterno, a college football legend who won more games than any other major college coach in history. Sandusky, who was at his side for many of those victories, was for many years presumed to be Paterno's heir apparent.

    Accuser says Sandusky treated him like 'girlfriend' in graphic encounters

    Paterno died in January, a few weeks after the Penn State Board of Trustees dismissed him for not having done enough to stop Sandusky's alleged abuse.

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    726 comments

    The victims taking the stand against Scumdusky are very courageous. They are being forced to relive their nightmare in public and who knows what kind of crap they will have to take from Amendola. How many victims are out there that cannot find the strength to come forward???

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    Explore related topics: child, paterno, sex-abuse, penn-state, featured, sandusky, amendola, mcqueary, jerry-sandusky
  • 11
    Jun
    2012
    9:14am, EDT

    Accuser says Sandusky treated him like 'girlfriend' in graphic encounters

    The first witness against Jerry Sandusky testified that he was a teenager when Sandusky began abusing him. NBC's John Yang reports from Bellefonte, Pa.

    By John Yang, NBC News, and M. Alex Johnson, msnbc.com

    Updated at 7 p.m. ET: A 28-year-old man testified Monday that former Penn State University assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky treated him "like his girlfriend" for more than two years, showering him with gifts he was afraid he would lose if he told anyone about Sandusky's increasingly sexual behavior.

    Michael Isikoff, Kim Kaplan and Tom Winter of NBC News contributed to this report by John Yang of NBC News and M. Alex Johnson of msnbc.com. Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    Sandusky, 68, denies all 52 counts alleging that he abused 10 boys over 15 years. Two grand jury reports accused him of having used his connection to one of the nation's premier college football programs to "groom" the boys —whom he met through his Second Mile charity for troubled children — for sexual relationships.

    Earlier, on the opening day of his trial, Sandusky's attorney appeared to surprise prosecutors by listing Sandusky as a possible witness in his own defense.


    The trial before a jury of seven women and five men heard opened in Centre County Court in Bellefonte, Pa., culminating months of breathless coverage that led to the firing of head coach Joe Paterno, who won more games than any other major college football coach in history, many of them with Sandusky at his side.

    Paterno died in January, a few weeks after the Penn State Board of Trustees dismissed him for not having done enough to stop Sandusky's alleged abuse.

    The first of eight alleged victims expected to testify — identified as alleged victim No. 4 — said he endured more than 40 "very uncomfortable" incidents involving Sandusky during the two years, when he was 12 and 13 years old.

    (Although the men are being identified by name in court, NBC News and msnbc.com do not identify the victims of alleged sexual assaults.)

    NBC: Former Penn State president could face charges in Sandusky case

    Full coverage of the Jerry Sandusky trial

    The behavior progressed from mutual showers in the Penn State coaches' locker room to hugging and caressing to rolling around together on the floor.

    Eventually, the shower incidents progressed to Sandusky's placing the man's hand on his genitalia, said the man, who went on to describe more graphic behavior, including attempted sexual penetration.

    In rides in his car, Sandusky would put the man's hand on his knee, "basically like I was his girlfriend," which he said "freaked me out."

    "I could not stand it, and it happened almost every time I was in the car" with Sandusky, he said.

    The man described similar behavior that he said he witnessed with other children.

    At a summer camp at the beach, Sandusky would throw children up in the air in the water, "just like you do with a little kid, but he was grabbing them more about the buttocks area," the man said. "It was like brushing over your genitals."

    Among the gifts he said Sandusky gave him were hockey sticks, golf clubs, a snowboard, Penn State football jerseys and a cherished spot on the sideline during football games. One time, he said, Sandusky gave him money to buy marijuana, which he said he smoked in front of Sandusky in his car.

    The witness said those were things he desperately wanted but was afraid he would lose if he blew the whistle.

    "This was something good happening. I never had a father figure, and I'm liking everything I'm getting," he said, adding that he also feared being teased by classmates if they learned that he was "being molested by Jerry."

    The witness said under cross-examination that he regretted not having come forward earlier. Had he done so, he said, he might not feel responsible "for these other victims being molested." 

    Sandusky attorney targets accusers
    Amendola aggressively questioned the young man about his finances, part of a strategy he introduced in his opening statement, when he painted the eight alleged victims as troubled youths out for a big payday in court.

    "You saw those eight photos," Amendola said, referring to photographs of the eight accusers as young boys that the prosecution had presented in its opening statement.

    "Cute kids — why would they lie?" Amendola asked. "Folks, I don't know, when it comes to money. ...The evidence is going to show that six of these eight young men who are going to testify have sued. The evidence will show these young men have a financial interest in this."

    Amendola noted that as long ago as 1998, local prosecutors had declined to bring charges against Sandusky.

    "Jerry Sandusky has always said that he is innocent," Amendola said. "The testimony is going to be awful, but that doesn't make it true, and that's the bottom line."

    Moreover, the eight alleged victims were already troubled as youths, he suggested, saying they knew Sandusky in the first place only because educators and government agencies had referred them to Second Mile because "they had issues."


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Alleged victim No. 4 acknowledged that he was referred to Second Mile by a school guidance counselor at his school because "I got in trouble a lot" outside of class.

    Judge refuses to dismiss Sandusky charges

    But in his opening statement, Joseph McGettigan, the deputy state attorney general who is leading the prosecution, said the case was about "systematic behavior by a predator."

    All of the witnesses are now adults, but McGettigan asked the jurors to "bring your insight (and) understanding of the way children experience things and react to things."

    "They were boys. They didn't understand why this happened to them," he said.

    McGettigan also indicated that prosecutors would call Michael McQueary to testify, answering one of the key pretrial riddles.

    McQueary, a former Penn State assistant coach, told a grand jury that he witnessed Sandusky assaulting a boy in a shower in a locker room and that he told Paterno about the incident.

    But McQueary's accounts of the incident have varied. For example, he testified that he was certain that the incident took place in March 2002 and that he immediately reported it to university officials. But the prosecution says it occurred in February 2001 — more than a year earlier — a discrepancy the defense is sure to highlight.

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    464 comments

    Maybe instead of Penn State, he'll get to be "head" football coach for State Pen...

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    Explore related topics: paterno, penn-state, featured, child-sex-abuse, bellefonte, sandusky, jerry-sandusky
  • 6
    Jun
    2012
    6:53pm, EDT

    Jerry Sandusky trial: Many jurors have Penn State ties

    A panel of seven women and five men will begin hearing evidence next week in the sexual abuse trial of former Penn State coach Jerry Sandusky. NBC's Brian Williams has more.

     

    By msnbc.com staff and NBC News

    A retired school bus driver, a Wal-Mart employee, a Penn State professor and a Penn State football season ticketholder since the 1970s. They are among the 12 jurors and four alternates selected to hear the child sex abuse case against former Penn State assistant coach Jerry Sandusky.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    With jury selection completed on Wednesday, the judge said the trial would begin next week.

    Sandusky faces 52 counts of molesting 10 boys over a 15-year period. He has pleaded not guilty and faces more than 500 years in prison if convicted on all counts. The 68-year-old grandfather has denied the allegations.


    At least one jury expert says Sandusky’s attorney, Joe Amendola, was wise to insist that the case be tried locally. Prosecutors had sought an out-of-county jury.

    “I think quite frankly that Amendola is hedging his bets, and he’s very lucky he’s picking his jury in the area. I think he will probably find one person in that pool who will keep Jerry Sandusky from being convicted,” said Robin Wertz, a jury consultant based in Reading, Pa., and a one-time Penn State football season-ticket holder.

    “Penn State fans and people with connections to Penn State have a loyalty like none other, and they may need to see some real hard evidence, more so than people from out of town, to convict one of their own," Wertz told msnbc.com. "If there is a close call in this case … I think that Amendola’s smartest move was to hope for that one person in that Penn State community that will prevent a conviction.”

    But Howard Varinsky, a leading trial consultant who has been involved in high-profile cases, including those of Michael Jackson, Phil Spector, Jack Kevorkian and Timothy McVeigh, said Sandusky would probably have been better off with a change of venue.

    “It sounds like you have a pretty straight jury there, and it sounds like a prosecution jury to me,” he said.

    “The defense is hoping that with at least two science people on the jury. They get very picky on their evidence and want to see hard facts. There are no hard facts here. This is all witness testimony,” Varinsky said.

    12-person jury, alternates chosen in Sandusky case

    Details emerged of the selected jury's composition from the Bellefonte, Pa., courtroom. Many revealed a strong connection to Penn State. A look at jurors:

    Juror 1: A woman and Wal-Mart employee. She has two daughters. She said she doesn’t know much about the case.

    Juror 2: A 24-year-old man who plans to start school in the fall to study automotive technology.

    Juror 3: A woman whose husband is a physician in the same medical group in which John McQueary, the father of one of the key witnesses in the case, worked. The woman also has been a football season ticket holder since the 1970s.

    Sandusky's attorney had moved to strike the woman as a juror, but Judge John Cleland overruled his objection.

    "We're in Centre County. We're in rural Pennsylvania," Cleland said. "There are these (connections) that cannot be avoided."

    Juror 4: An engineer who is married to a librarian. "I do read blogs and papers,” he said. “I did make a point of avoiding stories about this case. I reach a saturation point about 2 ½ months ago. Once I received the summons I thought it would be better not read anyone."

    Watch the most-viewed videos on msnbc.com

    Juror 5: A Bellefonte High School physics and chemistry teacher. He has two boys, ages 5 and 2. He earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Penn State in 2003 and 2008. Asked by the defense attorney if he could be fair because he has two young boys, he says he could. He said he doesn't read too many newspapers and if he does, it’s the sports section. He said he knows about the case but not beyond common knowledge.

    Juror 6: A married woman in her 20s. She works at a department store. She doesn't read the newspapers and said she has not heard any specific details of the case. She said she has no opinion about the case.

    Juror 7: A Penn State junior who works part-time for the university’s sports facility. He is in his 20s and does administrative work for track and softball. He wore a Penn State archery T-shirt.  He read a lot about the case and had opinions, he said, but could put them aside for the trial.

    His cousin also played on the Penn State football team for six years, and his mom works for the State College Area School District. He said his mom knows more, but has not shared it with him.

    Juror 8: A retired Penn State professor in his late 60s or early 70s. He is married and worked as a soil science professor in the Department of Agriculture for 37 years. He’s been retired for four years.

    Juror 9: A retired woman in her 70s.

    Juror 10: She works at Penn State as an administrative assistant in engineering. She doesn't know anyone in case. She has two daughters and four grandchildren.

    Juror 11: A 30-year-old woman who worked part-time at Penn State as a dance class instructor. She said she has had conversations with her husband about the case. Her husband is a media specialist at the Larson Institute at Penn State. She has a Facebook account, has watched television and read newspapers, but hasn't seen information recently. She knows one potential witness through her dance connections, she said. She has one son, age 6. She has not experienced abuse in her life.

    Juror 12: A woman in her 50s or 60s who has been a Penn State professor for 24 years. She did not say what she teaches or what department she works in. She said she has read some news accounts and the Sandusky grand jury report. She also worked on a small committee with ousted Penn State President Graham Spanier.

    Alternate 1: A 30-year-old woman who is a Penn State graduate student majoring in human development. She said Sandusky spoke at her graduation.

    Alternate 2: A married woman with no children. She said she can be impartial and ready to commit herself to the time the trial would take. "I'm really bad about reading the newspaper. I don't watch a lot of television," she said.

    Alternate 3: A man in his 50s. He is married and has two sons, ages 29 and 30. He works in Reading, Pa. He said he talked to his wife about it but wasn't overly exposed to facts of the case. He read the grand jury report when it first came out, but said he hasn't kept up with latest developments. He doesn't get a newspaper or follow blogs, he said.

    He graduated from Penn State and his wife is the director for Upward Bound (a program within Penn State geared towards getting high school children prepared for college). This program has no connection with Sandusky’s charity, Second Mile. He attends high school football games. Asked about his two boys and whether he would be able to be objective, he nodded yes. His wife is a reporter, he said. His sister's husband is a retired corrections officer. He said did not know anyone who had been a victim of sexual assault.

    Alternate 4: A woman in her 60s. She said she doesn't believe a lot of what is reported in the media and staunchly believes in innocence until proven guilty. She adamantly agreed that prosecution must prove its case. She said she’s seen enough television and movies to know that it "has to be proven beyond reasonable doubt."

    Msnbc.com's Sevil Omer and James Eng contributed to this story, as did NBC News's Tom Winter.

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    171 comments

    all these jurors with ties to Penn State? they couldn't find any other jurors? anyone who has any connection to the university should not be allowed to serve on the jury. the jury is beginning to sound stacked in favor of Sandusky...

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  • 25
    May
    2012
    12:19pm, EDT

    Second Mile, charity that Jerry Sandusky founded, seeks to shut down

    By Mike Brunker, msnbc.com

    Pat Little / Reuters file

    Jerry Sandusky, the former Penn State football defensive coordinator who founded The Second Mile in 1977, allegedly met some of the young boys he sexually abused through its programs.

    The Second Mile, a charity for at-risk children founded by former Penn State coach Jerry Sandusky, has filed paperwork seeking to transfer its operations to a Texas-based Christian nonprofit, saying its association with the man at the center of a child sex abuse case has undercut its support.


    Follow Mike Brunker on Twitter and Facebook.


    In a statement Friday, the State College, Pa., charity’s interim CEO, David Woodle, said that accusations that Sandusky, 68, sexually abused young boys he met through Second Mile, had damaged the charity’s ability to raise money and attract volunteers and caused referring social service agencies to rethink sending at-risk kids to its programs.


    In an interview with the Centre Daily Times, which first reported the story, Woodle called the proposed transfer “a positive step in a very negative overall situation.” 

     

     

    “Over the past several months, representatives of The Second Mile … have been in discussions with parents, school partners and donors to determine what steps should be taken after criminal charges were announced against founder Gerald Sandusky,” the statement said. The board learned that there is overwhelming support for the programs, but that there would not be adequate support, including financial, from donors, volunteers and referring social service agencies to continue The Second Mile as its own entity.” 

    The statement said Second Mile, founded by Sandusky in 1977, had petitioned the Court of Common Pleas in Centre County to allow it to transfer approximately $2 million in cash assets, an ongoing endowment and program-related non-case assets to Houston-based Arrow Child & Family Ministries to fund programs in Pennsylvania for about two years. 

    During that period, Second Mile would continue to cooperate with authorities in connection with the criminal charges against Sandusky before eventually dissolving. 

    Second Mile said its directors selected Arrow after discussions with more than 15 organizations. 

    "Our priority is to ensure children continue to be served by these programs," the statement quoted Arrow founder Mark Tennant as saying. "We were shocked and saddened by the events that led us here, but we are committed to the future of these children and their families and look forward to building on the outstanding work done by so many individuals who have been a part of The Second Mile over the years." 

    The statement indicated that it could take several months for the court to rule on its petition. 

    Sandusky has pleaded not guilty to 52 criminal counts of alleged abuse of 10 boys over 15 years, some of whom were Second Mile clients. Jury selection is scheduled to start June 5.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    65 comments

    since Sandusky used his charity to groom his victims I think their assets should be forfeit, and a fund set up to handle the extensive litigation and restitution claims that are sure to follow this short eyes conviction. And since he was such a ruff tuff football guy...throw him in the sodomy wing o …

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  • 14
    Jan
    2012
    7:26pm, EST

    Paterno: 'I didn't know exactly how to handle' sex abuse case

    Former Penn State football coach Joe Paterno, in an interview with The Washington Post, expresses disappointment that he didn't do more to find out what was being done about Jerry Sandusky's alleged behavior. NBC national Investigative Correspondent Michael Isikoff reports.

    178 comments

    Call the cops... that's how you handle it!!

    Show more
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  • 9
    Jan
    2012
    4:05pm, EST

    Paternos donate $100,000 to Penn State

    Paul Vathis / AP file

    Former Penn State head football coach Joe Paterno, right, with his ex-defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky.

    By msnbc.com staff and The Associated Press

    Penn State’s legendary football coach Joe Paterno donated $100,000 to the university, weeks after university trustees fired him amid allegations his former assistant coach Jerry Sandusky had molested children, The Patriot-News reported on Monday.

    Paterno and his wife, Sue, made the donation in December. Sue Paterno on Monday said the donation had been an annual gift to the Paterno Liberal Arts Undergraduate Fellows Program and the Paterno Library.

    Students in the fellows program receive $1,500 to $5,000 to help fund research, overseas study and internships.

    English professor Jack Selzer, who runs it, said the $50,000 gift was the couple's second contribution to the program.

    "It helps students who otherwise would never have a chance to study abroad (to) have a chance," Selzer told the Associated Press. "It really frees them up for experiences that they could otherwise never afford."

    Over the years, the Paternos have donated more than $4 million to the university and have helped raised an additional $14 million for the library, according to Bloomberg News.

    Paterno, a member of the College Football of Fame who turned 85 on Dec. 21, has not spoken publicly since his ouster. He has since been diagnosed with a treatable form of lung cancer. 

    Scandal
    Paterno and university President Graham Spanier were fired by trustees in November for failing to tell police what they knew about accusations involving Sandusky. Paterno has testified before a grand jury about the charges.

    Jerry Sandusky spoke exclusively to Rock Center, telling Bob Costas that he is not a pedophile. Sandusky was charged earlier this month with 40 criminal counts accusing him of sexual abuse of minors.

    One-time Paterno heir apparent, 67-year-old Sandusky faces 52 child molestation charges involving 10 young boys. Sandusky has denied the allegations, telling NBC that he showered and horsed around with boys but never sexually abused them. He is under house arrest.

    Gary Schultz, a former vice president, and Curley, the athletic director, are charged with perjury and failure to report suspected child abuse. All three men have denied the allegations and await trial. Schultz has since retired, while Curley is on leave.

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    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    199 comments

    Blood money-pure and simple. And guess what Joe, it still won't get you in heaven after what you DIDN'T DO!

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  • 8
    Dec
    2011
    7:35pm, EST

    Sandusky's wife: 'I continue to believe in Jerry's innocence'

    Former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky left jail Thursday after posting a $250,000 bail. His wife came to his defense, saying no child was forced to stay in the basement of the Sandusky residence. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

     

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news service reports

    The wife of former Penn State football coach Jerry Sandusky says she's "shocked and dismayed" by the child molestation charges against her husband but continues to believe he is innocent, NBC Philadelphia reported.

    Dorothy "Dottie" Sandusky broke her silence on Thursday, issuing a statement on the same day her husband was released on bail and placed under house arrest.

    After spending the evening in jail, Sandusky posted bail using $200,000 in real estate holdings and a $50,000 certified check provided by his wife, according to online court documents.

    Read NBC Philadelphia's complete coverage

    Sandusky was arrested Wednesday and charged with 12 new sex abuse counts involving two new alleged victims. He has maintained his innocence. In all, he faces more than 50 charges.  

    The latest accusers are the ninth and 10th alleged victims who in grand jury reports that claim Sandusky befriended and then molested boys he met through his Second Mile charity for troubled youth. A grand jury document released Wednesday echoed an earlier report, saying Sandusky gave the boys gifts while also making sexual advances toward them.

    One of the new accusers said Sandusky kept him in a basement bedroom during overnight visits to Sandusky's home, forced him to perform sex acts and assaulted him.

    According to the grand jury report, "the victim testified that on at least one occasion he screamed for help, knowing that Sandusky's wife was upstairs, but no one ever came to help him."

    Dorothy Sandusky vehemently denied that allegation.

    "No child who ever visited our home was ever forced to stay in our basement and fed there. All the kids who visited us ate with us and our kids and other guests when they were at our home," she said in her statement.

    NBC Philadelphia provided Dorothy Sandusky's full statement:

    I want to thank our children, our family, our extended family of former Second Mile participants, and all our friends for standing by us through these difficult times. Jerry and I want to express our sorrow for all the hurt that has come to those who have supported us and our beloved Penn State and State College Communities.

    I have been shocked and dismayed by the allegations made against Jerry, particularly the most recent one that a now young man has said he was kept in our basement during visits and screamed for help as Jerry assaulted him while I was in our home and didn’t respond to his cries for help.

    As the mother of six children, I have been devastated by these accusations. I am also angry about these false accusations that such a terrible incident ever occurred in my home. No child who ever visited our home was ever forced to stay in our basement and fed there. All the kids who visited us ate with us and our kids and other guests when they were at our home. Our children, our extended family and friends know how much Jerry and I love kids and have always tried to help and care for them. We would never do anything to hurt them. I am so sad anyone would make such a terrible accusation which is absolutely untrue. We don’t know why these young men have made these false accusations, but we want everyone to know they are untrue. 

    I continue to believe in Jerry’s innocence and all the good things he has done. Jerry’s many success stories with his Second Mile kids and positive memories of those kids keep me going. I am asking everyone to please be reasonable and open-minded until both sides of this case are heard, and Jerry has the opportunity to prove his innocence.

    I would like to thank all those individuals who continue to support Jerry and hope they will continue to support us through the conclusion of this very sad time in our lives.

                                                                                                                          Dottie Sandusky

    Sandusky was charged last month with abusing eight boys, some on campus, over 15 years. The allegations that were not immediately brought to the attention of authorities even though high-level people at Penn State apparently knew about them.

    The scandal resulting from Sandusky's arrest led to the ouster of school President Graham Spanier and longtime head football coach Joe Paterno.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Earlier: Sandusky freed on bail after night in jail

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    381 comments

    Dottie, if what I've read is true in the accusations then you share in some of these crimes that have been committed against these kids. Every child-predators wife knows exactly what is going on. And just like you, they all come to the defense of their "sick" husbands. .

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  • 8
    Dec
    2011
    11:35am, EST

    Sandusky freed on bail after night in jail

    Msnbc's Thomas Roberts talks to NBC's Michael Isikoff and criminal trial attorney B.J. Bernstein about the Sandusky case.

    By NBC, msnbc.com and news services

     

    UPDATED 10:27 a.m. ET: Jerry Sandusky has been freed on bail and has left the jail, NBC Philadelphia reports.

    Previous story:

    BELLEFONTE, Pa. --  Former Penn State football coach Jerry Sandusky posted bail Thursday after spending a night in jail following a new round of sex-abuse charges filed against him.

    Sandusky secured his release using $200,000 in real estate holdings and a $50,000 certified check provided by his wife, Dorothy, according to online court records. Sandusky remained at the facility as of midmorning and the warden said he was quiet and cooperative during his overnight stay.

    Sandusky was arrested Wednesday and charged with 12 new sex abuse counts involving two new alleged victims. He has maintained his innocence. In all, he faces more than 50 charges. 

    Jerry Sandusky's wife came to his defense, saying no child was forced to stay in the basement of the Sandusky residence.

    The latest accusers are the ninth and 10th alleged victims described in grand jury reports that claim Sandusky befriended and then molested boys he met through his Second Mile charity for troubled youth. A grand jury document released Wednesday echoed an earlier report, saying Sandusky gave the boys gifts while also making sexual advances toward them.

    Nabil K. Mark / Centre Daily Times via AP

    Jerry Sandusky gets out of a car in front of his State College, Pa., home on Thursday.

    One of the new accusers said Sandusky kept him in a basement bedroom during overnight visits to Sandusky's home, forced him to perform sex acts and assaulted him.

    "The victim testified that on at least one occasion he screamed for help, knowing that Sandusky's wife was upstairs, but no one ever came to help him," the grand jury report said.

    Sandusky was charged last month with abusing eight boys, some on campus, over 15 years, allegations that were not immediately brought to the attention of authorities even though high-level people at Penn State apparently knew about them.

    The scandal resulting from Sandusky's arrest led to the ouster of school President Graham Spanier and longtime head football coach Joe Paterno.

    In interviews following his initial arrest, Sandusky denied sexually assaulting children but acknowledged showering and engaging in "horseplay" with them.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More on Sandusky scandal:

    • Former prisoners: Blagojevich faces rude awakening
    • Another Sandusky accuser claims sexual abuse
    • Sandusky's dinner with alleged victims raisers legal questions

     

    243 comments

    I am disgusted by Jerry Sandusky but I am even more horrified by his wife's actions. How can any sane woman tolerate this monster in her house to the extent of contributing to his bail??? If that child cried for help and that b$tch did nothing, she is as guilty as he is.

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  • 2
    Dec
    2011
    6:57pm, EST

    Sandusky accuser says police knew of recent dinner

    By The Associated Press

    A Penn State accuser who dined with Jerry Sandusky this summer did so only after getting permission from police, the man's lawyer said Friday as he blasted suggestions that alleged victims remained friendly with the former Penn State coach.

    "Police gave their seal of approval for him to attend. They even wanted him to wear an electronic listening device," attorney Howard Janet said Friday. He also called into question Sandusky's motives for inviting the man to dinner while the ex-coach knew he was under investigation.

    Sandusky has been charged with molesting eight boys over 15 years. He is accused of mining the ranks of his Second Mile charity to find underprivileged boys to abuse.

    Sandusky says he is innocent and his lawyer, Joseph Amendola, has questioned several accusers' claims and the depiction of his client made in a grand jury report that identified the alleged victims by number. Earlier this week, Amendola told The Patriot-News of Harrisburg that several accusers visited the Sandusky home and stayed on good terms with the ex-coach for years.

    He told The Associated Press on Friday that another dinner guest that night was the man identified in the grand jury report as Victim No. 2, who Sandusky is accused of sodomizing in a Penn State shower.

    Janet said another man identified as a victim in the grand jury report attended, but he did not specify who that was. He called Amendola's claim that accusers remained friendly with Sandusky was "grotesque."

    Janet represents the man known in the grand jury report as Victim No. 6, who was allegedly bear-hugged by Sandusky as they showered together at Penn State in 1998, when the boy was 11. The boy's mother filed a complaint; a police investigation ended with no charges filed.

    The alleged victim, now 24, contacted police this summer when Sandusky invited him over for dinner, Janet said. He didn't wear a wire because he was nervous but reported back to police about the dinner afterward, the lawyer said.

    The dinner started at Sandusky's house and then moved to a restaurant, and included Sandusky and his wife.

    Janet said Sandusky pitched the dinner as a chance for former Second Mile participants to get together. "Why was he arranging to meet with victims while under investigation? Was he trying to tamper with or improperly influence potential witnesses?" Janet said.

    He would not say if the investigation came up in conversation that night, or detail what his client later reported back to police. The client didn't wear a wire because he was nervous, Janet said.

    Sandusky's lawyer said the meeting was part of an effort by Sandusky and his wife to maintain "friendships with lots of kids they helped as those kids grew into adulthood."

    "The dinner at a local State College restaurant last summer, which was attended by Jerry and Dottie and alleged victims 2 and 6, was simply an effort on the Sanduskys' part to maintain those long established positive relationships with young men whom the Sanduskys believed were their friends," Amendola said.

    Victim No. 2 was the boy seen being abused by Sandusky in a Penn State shower in 2002, according to the grand jury report. The witness, since identified as then-graduate assistant Mike McQueary, told coach Joe Paterno about the incident, the report said. Police were never notified.

    The grand jury report said the boy had not been located. Amendola has said he believes the alleged victim is being represented by a State College attorney who did not respond to messages left by the AP late Friday.

    Penn State fired Paterno and school President Graham Spanier after the report was made public. Two former Penn State officials are charged with failing to report complaints of abuse, and with lying to a grand jury. They have pleaded not guilty.

    Sandusky is free on bail, and is next due in court on Dec. 13 for a preliminary hearing.

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    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    31 comments

    Wow. This was clearly an attempt by Sandusky to influence victims whom he knew would probably testify against him. This guy is a master manipulator. .

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  • 28
    Nov
    2011
    4:51pm, EST

    Sandusky charity tells donors to give elsewhere

    By Associated Press

    HARRISBURG, Pa. -- The charity for at-risk children founded by Jerry Sandusky on Monday asked its donors to instead give their money to the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Rape.

    The Second Mile made the recommendation in the latest sign its days may be numbered. But the charity said its December programs will continue as scheduled.

    The Second Mile was founded in the 1970s by Sandusky, who was charged this month with sexual abuse of eight boys over a 15-year period. Prosecutors say Sandusky, a former Penn State assistant football coach, met victims through the charity. He denies the allegations.

    Last week, the charity said it was considering restructuring, transferring programs to other organizations or ceasing operations.

    Lawyers for one of the people described in a grand jury report as a victim of repeated sexual attacks by Sandusky are seeking a court order to prevent the charity from unloading its assets.

    The scandal has resulted in the ouster of head football coach Joe Paterno and has cast a shadow over one of college football's most legendary programs.


     

    In other developments Monday:

    • A team with the U.S. Department of Education arrived in State College as part of the federal investigation into whether the school violated reporting mandates for campus crime. The federal investigation centers on whether reporting provisions of the Clery Act were complied with in the Sandusky case. State prosecutors charged athletic director Tim Curley and former vice president Gary Schultz with not properly reporting suspected child abuse and perjury before a grand jury. Violations of the Clery Act, named for a Lehigh University freshman who was raped and murdered in her dorm room by another student in 1986, can bring fines and a loss of federal student aid.
    • Penn State said student government leaders and high-ranking administrators will participate in a town hall forum Wednesday for students about the child sex abuse scandal. The forum will be broadcast by the Pennsylvania Cable Network and streamed over the Internet. The school also plans three forums for students that will be run by its counseling and psychological services center. Potential topics include the criminal allegations, Penn State's image, the reactions of others to the scandal and stress. 

    Curley has been placed on leave, and Schultz, who oversaw the university's police department, has stepped down.

    Schultz and Curley have denied the allegations and await preliminary hearings next month. Sandusky acknowledges he showered with boys but says he never molested them.

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    56 comments

    Why the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Rape? PCAR is a 35 year old organization founded in the "all men are potential rapists" days of militant feminism. Their web-page states, The fact is….. “About 3 percent of American men – a total of 2.78 million men – have experienced a …

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  • 22
    Nov
    2011
    2:07pm, EST

    Judge delays hearing in Sandusky sex abuse case

    By NBC News and msnbc.com staff

    BELLEFONTE, Pa. – A preliminary hearing for former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky, accused of sexually abusing eight boys, has been delayed.

    The hearing, set  for Tuesday, was resceduled for Dec. 13 in the Centre County Courthouse in Bellefonte, Pa., according to court records. The change was made “to accommodate the logistical needs involved in the hearing,” a posting on the courthouse website read.

    Messages seeking comment from Sandusky’s attorney Joe Amendola and the state attorney general's office weren't immediately returned to msnbc.com or NBC News.

    Sandusky is accused of molesting eight boys beginning in the mid-1990s. Authorities say some assaults happened on Penn State's campus and were reported to administrators but not to police agencies.

    Hearings for Gary Schultz and Tim Curley, the two former Penn State administrators accused of failing to properly report suspected abuse and of perjury before a grand jury, was set for Dec. 6 in the Dauphin County Courthouse in Harrisburg. Both maintain their innocence.

    The sex-abuse allegations have stunned Penn State and altered the image of its legendary college football coach, Joe Paterno, who was ousted amid the scandal.

    Here are other developments in the case:

    • Former Penn State student disciplinarian Vicky Triponey told The Wall Street Journal that football players were treated "more favorably than other students accused of violating the community standards as defined by the student code of conduct."
    • Former FBI director Louis Freeh will lead Penn State's investigation into allegations against Sandusky.
    • Pennsylvania state prosecutors filed a secret motion to hold Sandusky’s charity, The Second Mile, in contempt over missing records, a source familiar with the investigation told NBC News’ Michael Isikoff.
    • Frankie Probst, 24, described to NBC News of his friendship with Sandusky. Between the ages of 10 and 16, Probst frequently spent the weekend with Sandusky, but says that Sandusky never abused him, despite feeling moments of discomfort.

    Frankie Probst, 24, described being friended, mentored and coached by Jerry Sandusky as a child. Between the ages of 10 and 16, Probst frequently spent the weekend with Sandusky, but says that Sandusky never abused him. Natalie Morales reports.

     

    29 comments

    This Sandusky is a sexually demented person. Right now, he should be behind bars, or at the very least, have an ankle bracelet on, and be under house arrest. In these kind of cases (child sexual abuse) to have the accused out and free on bail, not only puts the perp in danger from an angry society,  …

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