Joe Paterno Allegedly Told of Jerry Sandusky Sex Abuse by Child in 1971 (Updated)

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dduncan4163

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Joe Paterno Allegedly Told of Jerry Sandusky Sex Abuse by Child in 1976 | Bleacher Report

Jerry Sandusky sexual abuse witnessed by Penn State assistants

.Reports: PSU coaches saw abuse; Paterno told victim to drop claim

As many as six assistant coaches at Penn State witnessed "inappropriate behavior" between Jerry Sandusky and boys, according to a report by NBC News. Furthermore, CNN reports two men have come forward and said they reported Sandusky's abuse to former head coach Joe Paterno before he said to drop the accusation. It is uncertain if the assistant coaches reported what they saw to Penn State officials before the sex abuse scandal was uncovered in 2011.

The new details have come from a court order for an insurance case involving Penn State. Court documents observed by NBC reported "inappropriate" or "sexual" contact between Sandusky and children in 1987 and 1988.

A lawyer for one of the three coaches from the 1990s denied his client saw anything. A second coach declined to comment. A third could not be reached. The identity of the fourth was not disclosed to NBC News. The report did not discuss efforts to contact the other two coaches.
On Thursday, a PennLive.com report said Paterno was told that Sandusky was sexually abusing children as early as 1976. One of the two victims tells CNN that he was hitchhiking when Sandusky picked him up, bought him beer and provided him with marijuana before he was attacked while standing at a urinal in a Penn State bathroom. He was 15 years old at the time and had previously been abused by a local priest. The victim, who is now 62 years old, told Paterno and the complaint went ignored by the longtime head coach. Paterno accused him of making it up and said that he would call the authorities.
The details of his abuse were confirmed to CNN by one of the victim's close friends from the 70s and a Pennsylvania state trooper that was told after Sandusky's arrest.
“That kind of took the wind out of me,” the victim tells CNN. “I knew, I had a feeling when I first came forward that this wasn't going to be the end. There's going to be more people and there is, there was. It's crazy. I am just kind of lost for words right now.”
The victim was one of 30 men who received part of a $60 million settlement with the university. Penn State paid for his two-plus years in rehab that ended in 2014, when he dealt with alcohol abuse.

• MCCANN: Breaking down the latest accusation against Joe Paterno
Sandusky is serving 30 to 60 years in prison following his conviction for molesting 10 boys he met through a charity event in 1994. He recently filed for a new trial.
Paterno died in Jan. 2012 after being dismissed as head football coach in the fall. He died before he was able to explain what he knew about Sandusky and the allegations. Former Penn State assistant coach Mike McQueary testified at the criminal trial that he informed Paterno he witnessed something sexual between Sandusky and a young boy in a Penn State locker room shower. McQueary says he told former athletic director Tim Curley and vice president Gary Schultz in detail about a sexual assault. They have denied the charges.

His family issued the following statement to CNN: “Joe Paterno's life has been scrutinized endlessly the last four and a half years. The facts that have emerged have repeatedly confirmed that he acted appropriately. "The suggestion that Joe Paterno participated in the call described is in direct conflict with the facts as we know them and contrary to the way he lived his life."
Penn State responded to the NBC report with the following statement:


“The university is facing and has faced a number of litigation matters and claims related to the Sandusky events. Allegations of various kinds have been made, and will likely continue to be made. The university does not speculate publicly or hypothesize about individual allegations. These are sensitive matters, and we want to be respectful of the rights of all individuals involved. It would be inappropriate to do otherwise. Penn State has continuously expressed its concern for victims of child abuse and its overarching commitment to not only ensuring our campuses are safe for children, but to also helping to build greater awareness of child sexual abuse and maltreatment. In the past five years, Penn State has enacted a multitude of reforms focused on fighting child abuse, and has introduced best practices in governance, management and compliance.”


After the 2011 investigation, the NCAA stripped Penn State and Paterno of more than two decades of victories. They have since been reinstated. A statue of Paterno was removed from outside Beaver Stadium. A report by FBI Director Louis Freeh determined that Paterno and three other top school officials covered up Sandusky's abuse and showed a "total and consistent disregard" for his victims.
 
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#2
#2
OMFG if the story is true then Joe could have stepped in 40 years ago. I am sick to my damn stomach right now
 
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The documents, which are part of Penn State's ongoing insurance case regarding Sandusky settlements, say "a child allegedly reported to PSU's head coach Joseph Paterno that he (the child) was sexually molested by Sandusky."
Paterno—who died in 2012, two months after being fired by Penn State amid the Sandusky controversy—maintained he had no knowledge of any previous acts. An investigation uncovered that former assistant Mike McQueary approached Paterno and claimed to have seen Sandusky molesting a child in a Penn State shower. Paterno reported the events to his superiors, but the incident was never reported to authorities.
The court order released Thursday indicated there were additional reports of misconduct by Sandusky in 1987 and 1988. One such incident allegedly found its way to Penn State's athletic director at the time, Jim Tarman. It's unclear if Tarman, who retired in 1993, ever took action.
 
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So many kids could have been saved from Sandusky if Joe and others just hadn't of looked the other way.


Update....Sandusky victim: Joe Paterno told me to drop abuse accusation - CNN.com

This is sick as it comes and Joe Paterno was a f*****g MONSTER. This just makes me sick. How many kids could have been saved from that chicken hawk if Joe or just one of his coaches would have done the right thing.
 
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#6
#6
They need to bury that football program. I don't care, let all the kids transfer, I hope the university has to pay out the nose in lawsuits.
 
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#8
So he was told on at least 2 different occasions? How do you not confront him if you are the head coach or the assistant that caught him in the shower? I'd have a hard time not killing the SOB if I caught him in the act or was told by an assistant or by the kid he abused! Can't imagine any of his victims lead a "normal" life today. So Sad!
 
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#11
They need to bury that football program. I don't care, let all the kids transfer, I hope the university has to pay out the nose in lawsuits.

The NCAA already did all of that but then later repealed the sanctions (for reasons I still don't understand). They even gave Paterno his 111 wins back, reinstating him as the all time winning coach in college football history. Whatever new information may arise, this issue is resolved as far the NCAA in all of it's weakness is concerned.
 
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They need to bury that football program. I don't care, let all the kids transfer, I hope the university has to pay out the nose in lawsuits.

Might as well give the country back to the Indians while we're at it.

Anyone involved with this awful incident is gone, other than some misguided vigilante bloodlust what's gained by destroying the folks there now?
 
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#16
#16
I love how everyone believes accusations when it's not a team they root for.

None of us know what really happened. Why not leave it at that.
 
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#20
#20
They need to bury that football program. I don't care, let all the kids transfer, I hope the university has to pay out the nose in lawsuits.

This is a criminal case, not something that should destroy a university and community.
 
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#21
#21
This is a criminal case, not something that should destroy a university and community.

So the program shouldn't be punished for being made aware that children were being raped and doing nothing ? I got no problem releasing everyone, including the coaches and all players, the ability to GTFO.
 
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I love how everyone believes accusations when it's not a team they root for.

None of us know what really happened. Why not leave it at that.

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#23
#23
So the program shouldn't be punished for being made aware that children were being raped and doing nothing ? I got no problem releasing everyone, including the coaches and all players, the ability to GTFO.

It's a community that relies on that 8 game season, no need to destroy hundreds of thousands of people because a handful of people were neglectful. I'm not trying to lessen what happened, but Sandusky and anyone else involved will get what deserve. No one person is bigger than a program.
 
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So the program shouldn't be punished for being made aware that children were being raped and doing nothing ? I got no problem releasing everyone, including the coaches and all players, the ability to GTFO.

Name one person currently in the Penn State program who played any role in these events. That's like me taking your My Little Ponies because the guy that used to live in your house stole my easy bake oven.
 
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