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  • 18
    Jul
    2012
    5:36pm, EDT

    Former Penn State President Graham Spanier drops lawsuit over emails

    By Vignesh Ramachandran

    Former Penn State University President Graham Spanier is no longer fighting for access to his old university emails dealing with convicted child sex abuser Jerry Sandusky.

    Court documents filed Wednesday show Spanier dropped a lawsuit that sought release of the emails, the Associated Press reported.



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    Spanier originally filed suit in May, wanting access to his university emails from 1998 to 2004 in order to prepare before speaking with investigators from the team led by former FBI Director Louis Freeh, who was hired by the university's board of trustees, according the Centre Daily Times. But Penn State lawyers worried that giving Spanier access would compromise the investigation.

    No reason was cited for Spanier's decision to drop lawsuit but the issue now appears moot because Freeh issued his report last week. 

    Spanier's actions -- or lack thereof -- are out in the open now: He is not charged with any crime, according to the AP, although his leadership was criticized in the Freeh report. The 267-page report found that top university officials, including Spanier, could have prevented the sex abuse by Sandusky from continuing. The report found officials wanted to avoid bad publicity and concealed the allegations of abuse.

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    The emails revealed in the Freeh investigation are quite damning: One of Spanier's emails to university administrators from 2001 said it would be "humane" to approach Sandusky rather than going to authorities, the Centre Daily Times reported, but he worried they could be vulnerable if they kept quiet.

    Sandusky was convicted last month of abusing 10 boys over 15 years. He could face up to 373 years in prison.

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    5 comments

    And everyone at the University will pay for it....these people will walk away with a slap on the hand.

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    Explore related topics: penn-state-university, graham-spanier, jerry-sandusky
  • 17
    Jul
    2012
    6:37pm, EDT

    Airplane banner tells Penn State: Take Joe Paterno statue down

    Gene J. Puskar / AP

    The statue of former Penn State University head football coach Joe Paterno stands outside Beaver Stadium in State College, Pa.

    By James Eng and Vignesh Ramachandran, NBC News

    A small plane flew around the Penn State campus in State College, Pa., on Tuesday with a banner urging that the school dismantle the statue of football coach Joe Paterno.


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    "Take the statue down or we will," the banner said.

    The incident follows the release Thursday of former FBI Director Louis Freeh's report that accused Paterno of helping to cover up child abuse by assistant coach Jerry Sandusky.


    And it comes on a day when Brown University, Paterno's alma mater, said it was taking his name off an annual athletic award, and a Penn State student group that manages a rallying spot for the Nittany Lions' football games changed the spot's name from "Paternoville" to "Nittanyville."

    National Sky Ads, the Long Island-based company that flew the banner, told NBC News that the person who hired them is "a concerned citizen" who "takes offense to certain things." The owner, who only wanted to be identified as "Ted," confirmed that this was the same person who hired an airplane banner poking fun at Tiger Woods in 2010.

    The plane is registered to Ohio-based Air America Aerial Ads, according to the Centre Daily Times. The operator of that plane, James Miller, would not identify his client, but told the Centre Daily Times that he believes in the freedom of speech.

    Related: Middle school to remove Paterno mural following Freeh report

    A Penn State spokesman, David La Torre, confirmed the banner's appearance but had no further information.

    In an interview Tuesday with WJAC-TV, Penn State President Rodney Erickson said top university officials are looking into what, if anything to do with the 7-foot statue of Paterno, which stands outside Beaver Stadium.

    “We're obviously also hearing from members of the Penn State community and far beyond. Obviously, Joe Paterno was a legend. He had a very important influence on the university for many years, so we need to look at in a comprehensive kind of fashion the things that coach Paterno did that were supportive of our educational efforts and other things,” Erickson said.

    “Obviously, as the Freeh report indicates, there were clearly very bad judgments that were made along the way with respect to the Sandusky matter and that will forever be a mark against Joe's contributions.”

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    He added: “So we need some time to separate out the positive kinds of things with respect to education, as well as the things that would serve as a very negative reminder of the consequences of possibilities of what transpired here at the university.”

    Last month, Sandusky was convicted of abusing 10 boys over 15 years, and he could face up to 373 years in prison. The Freeh report found four top university officials including Paterno, who died in January of lung cancer, could have prevented the sex abuse from continuing.

    In a new interview, Penn State president Rodney Erickson addresses questions about the university's future and the scathing report by former FBI director Louis Freeh on the Jerry Sandusky scandal.

    In the WJAC-TV interview, Erickson also said he’s still counting on the university’s insurance policies to cover the cost of settling lawsuits arising from the Sandusky scandal.

    “At this point, we're counting on insurance funding and the other sources of funding that we identified earlier in the year, which is funds that were derived from loans - interests on loans to self-supporting units within the university - including the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics.”

    He said no taxpayer, donor or tuition money would be used to pay any settlements.

    Erickson also said in the interview that the university would soon submit a response to questions from the NCAA, which is considering sanctions against the school’s sports programs.

    NCAA President Mark Emmert said the Penn State sex abuse scandal was so egregious that he would not rule out applying the so-called "death penalty" to the university – the cancellation of an entire football season.

    Asked in an interview on PBS's Tavis Smiley show Monday night about such a severe sanction, Emmert said: "I don't want to take anything off the table. The fact is this is completely different than ... anything else we have dealt with."

    "I don't know that past precedent makes particularly good sense in this case," Emmert said.

    Once Penn State responds to the NCAA's letter, the organization will decide whether to press charges against the college.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    418 comments

    "PAPA JOES A HERO!!!!" "HE DID SO MUCH!!!!"...really? like what? what the hell did he do but coach football? he coached a childs game that has become overly cherished into something that actually takes a stance at helping humanity. He did nothing, nothing at all to either help or advance humanity. N …

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    Explore related topics: joe-paterno, state-college, penn-state-university, jerry-sandusky
  • 2
    Dec
    2011
    11:00am, EST

    Penn State formally dismisses Paterno, school president

    By Reuters

     STATE COLLEGE, Pa - Penn State University's Board of Trustees on Friday formally dismissed legendary football coach Joe Paterno and President Graham Spanier, finalizing actions announced last month.

    The board's executive committee held a five-minute teleconference to make the firings official and ensure that the university was following proper procedure about public meetings, said spokesman Bill Mahon.

    The university announced Paterno's and Spanier's firings on Nov. 9, four days after former Penn State football assistant coach Jerry Sandusky was arrested on charges he had sex with young boys over a 15-year period.

    "I think today we wanted to make sure we crossed our 't's and dotted our 'i's," Bill Mahon said.

    Paterno was head coach of the Nittany Lions, a college football powerhouse, for 46 years.

    Nine alleged victims have accused Sandusky of abuse, and one has filed a lawsuit against Sandusky, Penn State and The Second Mile, a charity founded by Sandusky to help troubled children.

    Read interview with Sandusky on Rock Center

    Sandusky, a former defensive coordinator, faces 40 counts for purportedly sexually assaulting eight boys over a 15-year period. If convicted, he faces life in prison. He has maintained his innocence.

    The executive committee voted unanimously on the resolutions severing Paterno and Spanier from their positions, Mahon said. It also voted unanimously on the resolution replacing Spanier with Rodney Erickson.

    Trustee Steve Garban, chairman of the teleconference, said in a statement that the purpose of the meeting was to "reaffirm" the board's Nov. 9 actions.

    "While the board believes immediate action was necessary, it is holding a special meeting of its executive committee to reaffirm and ratify the board's prior personnel action," Garban said.

    Although technically fired, Spanier still holds a tenured position with the university. Mahon said he remains eligible to go on a one-year sabbatical and return to teach at Penn State following a hiatus.

    Mahon could not say for certain if the same provision worked for Paterno.

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    53 comments

    Does firing him instead of a forced retirement make the PSU officials feel better about themselves?

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