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  • 24
    Mar
    2012
    11:24am, EDT

    NBC exclusive: Sandusky labeled 'likely pedophile' in 1998 report

    Jerry Sandusky, the former Penn State assistant football facing 50 counts of sexually abusing boys, was characterized as a "likely pedophile" in an internal university report written by a psychologist in 1998, but police weren't able to make a case. NBC's Michael Isikoff reports.

    Former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky was labeled a “likely pedophile” in 1998, when campus police investigated an incident in which he bear hugged a young boy in the showers at the university.

    In an exclusive report for Today, NBC News National Investigative Correspondent Michael Isikoff obtained the police file on the investigation. You can read all three files – the police report itself and assessments from two psychologists: Alycia A. Chambers, the therapist for one of Sandusky’s alleged victims, and  John Seasock, who had worked with the local Centre County Child and Youth Services, a local agency that had licensed Sandusky as a foster parent.


    Chambers issued the warning about Sandusky in a detailed report written after she interviewed the boy who was her client.

    “My consultants agree that the incidents meet all of our definitions, based on experience and education, of a likely pedophile’s pattern of building trust and gradual introduction of physical touch, within a context of a ‘loving,’ ‘special’ relationship,” Chambers wrote in her report.

    But Seasock, after meeting with the boy for an hour, concluded that no sexual offense had taken place nor was there “grooming” or “inappropriate sexual behavior” by Sandusky.

    ”All the interactions reported by (the boy) can be typically defined as normal between a healthy adult and a young adolescent male,” Seasock wrote in his report.

    Read more reporting by Michael Isikoff in 'The Isikoff Files'

    While the reports’ conclusions differed, one of the investigators on the 1998 case, Jerry Lauro, said he didn’t know that. Lauro, then with the state Department of Public Welfare and now retired, told NBC News he was never shown a copy of Chambers’ report and was stunned to learn of its conclusions.

    “Wow!” he said when he was read Chambers’ conclusions by a NBC News correspondent. “This is the first I’ve heard of this. I had no idea . If I would have seen the report, I would certainly have done some things differently. Boy, this is a shock. “

    Click here to watch the Today video piece, read Isikioff’s complete story and review the documents.

    Comment

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  • 7
    Feb
    2012
    2:59pm, EST

    Sandusky prosecutors cite neighbors in seeking tougher bail

    By Michael Isikoff, NBC News

    Pennsylvania state prosecutors are asking that Jerry Sandusky's bail conditions to be tightened after receiving reports from local neighbors that the accused child molester has been spotted  sitting on the deck of his house watching school children in a nearby playground. 

    In court papers filed Tuesday, prosecutors say there are "grave concerns" among Sandusky's neighbors about the safety of their children. They urge a judge to further restrict  conditions for the former Penn State University defensive coach, barring him from "leaving the walls of his house for any reason" unless accompanied by a court officer.

    The prosecutors acted after local school officials and neighbors complained that Sandusky was recently seen on the deck -- which overlooks an elementary school less than 50 yards away -- watching children play during recess.

    "To think that he's up there, watching our kids and that's his new outlet, that's just creepy," Amy Hasan, a neighbor of Sandusky's, told NBC News in an interview. 

    Sandusky's lawyer, Joe Amendola, texted a reporter that the claim he's been watching school children from his deck "is a totally false statement" made by individuals who "will not be happy unless Jerry is incarcerated." 

    He added that "the law presumes Jerry innocent and Jerrry has always maintained his innocence."

    Sandusky -- facing 52 counts of child sex abuse involving 10 children over a 15 year period -- has been under house arrest since his re-arrest last December, confined to his home with an electronic monitor around his ankle.

    Sandusky attorney: Accusers may have 'collaborated' in sex abuse case

    Amendola recently asked the judge overseeing the case, John Cleland, to ease his bail conditions  to allow him to meet, e-mail and text with his grandchildren. Sandusky also wants the freedom to leave his house to accompany a private investigator to identify the homes of potential witnesses in the case. Amendola wrote that the grandchildren have expressed "sadness" about their inability to communicate with their grandfather.

    But prosecutors strongly urged the judge to deny the request. 

    "House arrest is not meant to be a house party," they write in their court filing. They also noted that the ex-wife of one of Sandusky's sons "strenously objects to her three minor children having any contact whatsoever with the defendant."

    A hearing on the bail issue is slated for Friday.

    234 comments

    Lock this trash up and throw away the key once and for all!

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  • 5
    Dec
    2011
    5:36pm, EST

    Sandusky's dinner with alleged victims raises new legal questions

    A lawyer for one of the alleged victims of Jerry Sandusky, the former Penn State football coach who now faces 40 counts of child sex abuse, says Sandusky's long New York Times interview raises new questions about whether he may have attempted to influence witnesses just before he got indicted. NBC's Michael Isikoff reports.

    By Lisa Riordan Seville and Hannah Rappleye
    NBC News

    While under investigation by a criminal grand jury for allegedly sexually abusing young boys, Jerry Sandusky said he spoke to and even dined with men now identified as his victims. The 67-year-old former Penn State assistant coach accused of sexually abusing young boys for more than a decade holds up these encounters as proof of his innocence, but a lawyer for at least one of the victims believes they could be criminal.

    “One of the questions that raised in my mind, ‘Was this an effort on his part to tamper with witnesses?’” said Howard Janet, a Baltimore attorney representing the man known in the grand jury report of Sandusky as Victim 6. “Was it intended as a way to influence the public or the prospective jury pool?”

    In early November, Sandusky was charged with 40 counts of sexually abusing boys over a period of about 14 years. But the community knew of the investigation months earlier.


    The story went public on March 31, when the Patriot News newspaper broke the story that a grand jury had been convened to look into allegations that Sandusky abused a 15-year-old Clinton County, Pa., boy, now known as Victim 1. 

    The following day, Sandusky’s lawyer, Joe Amendola, issued a statement saying that his client was prepared to fight.

    “Should the allegations, as set forth in today’s newspaper article eventually lead to the institution of criminal charges against Jerry, Jerry fully intends to establish his innocence and put these false allegations to rest forever,” he said.

    Interviews with lawyers and the grand jury report show that in the months that followed, Sandusky made several attempts to contact boys who had participated in the charity he founded -- the Second Mile – and who later testified before the grand jury, prompting Janet to question whether Sandusky tried to sway the outcome of the investigation.

    Witness tampering in the state of Pennsylvania is defined as any act with the intent to intimidate a witness or victim to “refrain from reporting a crime, withhold or give false or misleading information, or to ignore or evade requests for information or a summons.”

    Under state penal codes, witness tampering is considered equal to the most serious offense a defendant is charged with. Among the charges against Sandusky are multiple first-degree felonies, which carry maximum sentences of up to 20 years in prison. 

    Sandusky has not been charged with tampering or intimidation of witnesses.

    A 'reunion' dinner
    In July, Sandusky called Victim 6 and asked him to dinner. Sandusky framed it as a “reunion” of former Second Mile children, Janet said. Police asked the alleged victim to wear a wire, Janet said, but he eventually decided not to because he was nervous.  

    Victim 6 testified before the grand jury that Sandusky showered with him on the Penn State campus. Sandusky was investigated in 1998 after the boy’s mother reported the incident to the police. Sandusky at the time admitted that he had showered with the boy – as well as another youth whose name surfaced in the subsequent investigation -- and was advised by a Penn State University detective not to do it again. The district attorney closed the case.

    On the night of the July dinner, Victim 6 said he met Sandusky at his home then continued on, along with Sandusky’s wife, to a local restaurant. Janet said his client was “surprised” to find no other former Second Mile children he knew among those at the restaurant, but he finished the dinner and reported back to the police.

    In an interview with NBC, Janet said it was “inconceivable” that Sandusky did not know he was under investigation at the time. “It was public knowledge and it was widely reported,” he said.

    According to Amendola, Sandusky’s lawyer, Victim 2 was also at the dinner. Victim 2 is the boy who Penn State assistant coach Mike McQueary testified to seeing being raped by Sandusky in the showers in Penn State’s Lasch Football Building in 2002. Victim 2, however, has not been identified by prosecutors and did not testify at the grand jury. 

    Amendola told reporters in November that a man he believes is Victim 2 had appeared in his office weeks before to say he had no sexual contact with Sandusky. 

    Amendola said that both Victims 2 and 6 maintained a relationship with the Sanduskys in recent years, including visiting their home and attending other dinners. The July dinner, he said, was friendly. “Neither of them had any knowledge 2 or 6 had been or were going to be questioned” by the grand jury, and there was no mention of the investigation, Amendola wrote in a statement to NBC.

    “Jerry and Dottie have maintained positive contact with 2 and 6 as well as many other kids they helped who have grown into adulthood over the years,” he said. ”They are both deeply saddened and perplexed by the allegations.”

    Sandusky and his wife also reached out to at least one other alleged victim prior to his testifying, according to the grand jury report. Victim 7, a former Second Mile participant who Sandusky allegedly met around 1994, told the grand jury that weeks before his testimony, Sandusky, his wife, and an unidentified friend left several messages on his voicemail. It had been nearly two years since he last spoke or had contact with Sandusky. Victim 7 said he did not return their calls.

    Sandusky confirmed to the The New York Times that he had contacted at least one of his accusers but did so believing he would serve as a character witness. He said he did not know the prosecution had listed the individual as a victim.  

    An unorthodox defense strategy
    Sandusky’s defense has so far been unorthodox. He spoke live to NBC’s Bob Costas following his arrest and last week gave an extended interview to the New York Times.

    Asked by Costas if he was sexually attracted to young boys, Sandusky said, "Sexually attracted, no --  I enjoy young people, I love to be around them."

    The New York Times revisited the comment last week in an extended, four-hour interview in which reporter Jo Becker asked Sandusky about his answer to Costa's question. 

    "If I say, no, I'm not attracted to boys, that's not the truth because I'm attracted to young people, boys, girls," Sandusky said. 

    Amendola, sitting nearby, jumped in. "Yeah, but not sexually, you're attracted because you enjoy spending time..." he said. 

    "Right, I enjoy, that's what I was tryin' to say, answer that," Sandusky clarified. "I enjoy spending time with young people. I enjoy spending time with people."

    More news and feature stories from msnbc.com:

    • Monday's reading list: Best investigative reporting on the Web
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    • Model, editor serious injured by plane's propeller

    232 comments

    And this guy is out on the street because?

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  • 21
    Nov
    2011
    8:44pm, EST

    Sandusky charity faced contempt motion over missing records

    By Michael Isikoff
    NBC News National Investigative Correspondent

    Pennsylvania state prosecutors filed a secret motion to hold The Second Mile children’s charity in contempt in July after the organization failed to turn over expense records of founder Jerry Sandusky in response to a grand jury subpoena, according to a source familiar with the investigation.

    The contempt motion, filed under court seal, was withdrawn in October after some of the  missing Sandusky records were found and produced, said the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity. But the charity’s new lawyers are still looking for the rest of the subpoenaed material and seeking to determine whether the missing records were destroyed or removed in an effort to impede the investigation into Sandusky’s relationships with The Second Mile children, said the source, who has been briefed on some of the details of the investigation.

    The move to hold The Second Mile in contempt, which has previously not been reported, is the latest indication that the investigation into the Penn State sex abuse scandal may have widened to include obstruction of justice. Asked Monday if obstruction was a focus of Pennsylvania Attorney General Linda Kelly’s investigation, her spokesman, Nils Frederiksen, declined comment, citing rules covering the secrecy of matters before the grand jury. “This is a comprehensive, active and ongoing investigation,” he said.


    The New York Times reported last week that some The Second Mile board members were alarmed to learn that Sandusky’s travel and expense records for the years 2000 and 2003 were missing from an off-site storage facility. The material had been subpoenaed by prosecutors in an effort to piece together which children in The Second Mile programs may have attracted Sandusky’s attention and received gifts or been taken on trips by him, the paper reported. The Times said that the expense reports  for one of those years had apparently been misfiled and were later located, but that the rest of material was still missing -- a development that one unnamed investigator was quoted as calling “suspicious.”

    The Second Mile was founded by Sandusky in 1977 to help troubled children in central Pennsylvania. It expanded over the years into a statewide organization that raised millions of dollars from major corporations and attracted high profile honorary board members, such as Arnold Palmer and NFL Hall of Famer Franco Harris. State prosecutors say that Sandusky met each of the eight alleged victims he is accused of abusing through The Second Mile programs. Sandusky has denied the charges.

    At the time that Sandusky’s expense records were subpoenaed, the lawyer representing The Second Mile was Wendell Courtney, who for the previous 15 years had been general counsel of Penn State University. Courtney previously told NBC News that he had been retained by The Second Mile in 2009 to represent the organization  in its dealings with state prosecutors after the charity was first notified about the investigation into Sandusky. “I am not commenting further on this matter at this time,” Courtney said in an email Monday when asked about the contempt motion filed against the charity.

    Courtney is no longer representing The Second Mile. The charity last week announced that it had hired Lynne M. Abraham, the former Philadelphia district attorney, to conduct an internal investigation into what executives at The Second Mile knew about Sandusky’s activities. The charity also announced that Jack Raykovitz, its longtime executive director, had resigned.

    Related story: Second nonprofit sent kids to Sandusky charity

    There were other signs Monday that the investigations into the scandal could widen. A New York based charity, A Better Chance, confirmed to NBC News that it  sent about 30 children to a residential program run by The Second Mile between 1988 and 2001.

    Founded in 1963, A Better Chance places talented minority students in high performing public and private schools around the country. One of its leading benefactors is Oprah Winfrey, who has donated over $12 million and served as its  national spokesperson.

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    11 comments

    Should there be castration of child abusers andpedophiles as punishment? I think there shouldbe such a punishment; what do you think?

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  • 21
    Nov
    2011
    7:50pm, EST

    Second nonprofit says it sent kids to Sandusky charity

    By Hannah Rappleye and Lisa Riordan Seville, NBC News

    A New York-based charity sent about 30 children to a residential program run by The Second Mile, the charity founded by Jerry Sandusky.

    The nonprofit, A Better Chance, was founded in 1963 to provide better learning opportunities to young people of color. The program places talented minority students in high schools around the country. A Better Chance is a favorite charity of Oprah Winfrey -- she donated over $12 million and has served as its national spokesperson.


    While many Better Chance scholars are placed in private boarding schools, the charity also sends children to communities around the country with high-performing public schools. The Second Mile program was among the organizations that hosted such kids. Sandusky himself has no known connection to A Better Chance.

    A Better Chance has not reached out to Pennsylvania authorities regarding the relationship between the two organizations, said A Better Chance spokesman Michael Paluszek.

    “The information about the past relationship is public knowledge and A Better Chance has had no involvement with the foundation since 2001,” according to a statement from A Better Chance.

    Sandusky, 67, faces 40 grand jury charges of sexually abusing eight young boys over 15 years. He retired as Penn State defensive coordinator in 1999 and is alleged to have met the boys through The Second Mile, which he started in 1977. He has denied the charges.

    A Better Chance began sending students to a residence run by The Second Mile in 1988. Palusek said none of the A Better Chance kids lived with the Sadusky family.

    However, one A Better Chance student was quoted in a news article as saying he attended a went to a Penn State event that Sandusky was at in 1997. 

    The relationship between the two charities continued for about 13 years. Bright young teenagers, many from inner cities, moved from as far away as Philadelphia and New York City to the Second Mile residence near Penn State. They attended local schools in the State College area and received tutoring. Many stayed multiple years.

    Paluszek said that approximately 30 kids from A Better Chance lived under The Second Mile’s care over the years.
    “A Better Chance did not participate in the operation of oversight of that Community School Program,” he said.

    The Second Mile spent between $62,000 and $78,000 a year hosting kids from A Better Chance, according to tax filings from between 1997 and 2001. The money also provided assistance and services to foster families not related to A Better Chance.
    A Better Chance stopped sending children to The Second Mile in 2001, when the latter ended funding for the program, Paluszek said.

    “We have not had any involvement with the Second Mile Foundation in the past 10 years, nor have we received any complaints or inquiries from any of our students who attended their Community School Program,” he said.

    Related story: Sandusky charity weighing options, including closing

    A Better Chance is not the only charity associated with the Sandusky family. Last week, NBC reported that the Sanduskys may have hosted up to six children from the Fresh Air Fund program from the 1970s until the mid-1990s. The Fresh Air Fund connects New York City kids from disadvantaged neighborhoods to families in rural and urban communities.

    The Fresh Air Fund later confirmed the Sanduskys hosted at least one child from the Fund. Unlike A Better Chance, The Fresh Air Fund alerted Pennsylvania authorities when it learned Sandusky may have hosted children from the program

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    4 comments

    This thing stinks to high heaven. And what's been alleged at Syracuse adds yet another black eye to collegiate sports and NCAA/NIT in particular. It breaks my heart and leaves me breathless when I think of the boys (some now men) who have been scarred for life.

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  • 18
    Nov
    2011
    9:21am, EST

    Penn State case: Feds consider launching criminal inquiry

    As the sports program at Syracuse University is being hit with allegations of abuse by one of its long-time coaches, more victims are coming forward claiming they suffered sexual abuse at the hands of former Penn State Assistant Coach Jerry Sandusky. NBC's Peter Alexander reports.

    By Michael Isikoff
    NBC News National Investigative Correspondent

    The Penn State sex abuse scandal may soon become a federal case.

    A senior law enforcement source tells NBC News that federal prosecutors and FBI agents in Pennsylvania are now “looking hard” at whether to open up their own investigation because of allegations that former football assistant coach Jerry Sandusky crossed state lines to commit child abuse. 

    One of the Pennsylvania state charges against Sandusky alleges that he flew one boy – identified as Victim Number Four – to the Outback Bowl in Tampa in 1998 and then again to the Alamo Bowl in San Antonio in 1999. Starting when the boy was about 13 years old, Sandusky “repeatedly” abused him, including at the bowl games, a grand jury report charges. When the boy resisted Sandusky’s advances, the grand jury indictment charges, the football coach threatened “to send him home from the Alamo Bowl.”

    The feds are also trying to determine whether Sandusky used the Internet to communicate or even recruit his victims—also grounds for the FBI to become involved. And a New York-based charity, the Fresh Air Fund, confirmed this week that it sent five children to live with Sandusky in the 1970s and one in the mid-1990s. 

    “It would be inconceivable that we couldn’t find grounds” to make this a federal case, the official said.

    The review of the Sandusky matter is being conducted by Peter J. Smith, the U.S. attorney in Harrisburg, Pa. In a public statement this week, he called the Sandusky allegations "extremely disturbing" because they involve the safety of children, and "therefore mandate a thorough review of all the facts and appropriate action by law enforcement at all levels, including federal agencies." Beyond supporting an ongoing inquiry by the Department of Education into the actions of Penn State officials, Smith added: "I can't comment about other specific areas of federal inquiry." 

    Smith also offered federal assistance to Pennsylvania Attorney General Linda Kelly, who is overseeing the state case. Her spokeswoman told NBC News that there are now regular “communications” between the two offices.

    The FBI is also making its resources – including its crime lab and behavior analysis unit – available to investigators, a state police spokesman said.

    Read the grand jury indictment of Jerry Sandusky

    381 comments

    If the FEDS do not get involved there will be a huge cover up like there has been for 45 years, thats how it works in Pa

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  • 10
    Nov
    2011
    7:25pm, EST

    Paterno contacts criminal defense lawyer, source tells NBC News

    Former Assistant Coach Jerry Sandusky's Grand Jury indictment paints the disturbing portrait of a man who used his position to target and sexually abuse young boys over a long period of time. NBC's Savannah Guthrie reports on the missed opportunities to stop Sandusky.

    By Michael Isikoff
    NBC News National Investigative Correspondent

    Joe Paterno has reached out to a prominent Washington criminal defense lawyer to represent him in the Penn State sex abuse case, a source close to the case told NBC News.

    J. Sedgwick Sollers, who once represented President George H.W. Bush in the Iran-Contra affair, was contacted by Paterno's advisers on Thursday. But Sollers has not yet met with Paterno, and a formal retainer agreement has not been signed.

    The longtime Penn State football coach was fired Wednesday night after disclosures in a grand jury report that one of his assistants informed him in 2002 about an alleged incident of sexual abuse by former defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky.

    Paterno has not been charged with any crimes in the case. He has been described as a cooperating witness in the case. Two other university officials told by Paterno about the alleged incident were charged this week with failing to report Sandusky's conduct to legal authorities and perjury.

    Sollers declined to comment Thursday night. He is the managing partner in the Washington office of King & Spalding, a major Atlanta-based law firm. A spokesman for Paterno said in an email that "no lawyer has been retained."

    A source close to Paterno said that in addition to the investigations by the Pennsylvania Attorney General's Office, the former coach is concerned about the likelihood of civil lawsuits by Sandusky's alleged victims and their families.   

    Coach Joe Paterno's firing sent angry Pennsylvania State University students into the streets Wednesday night, where they showed support for the 84-year-old coach and tipped over a news van. NBC's Ron Mott reports.

    846 comments

    While you can fault Paterno for not calling the authorities when those above him swept this under the rug, I do not see that Paterno has done anything criminal. He did what he was supposed to do and those above him failed miserably in their responsibilities.

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