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  • 9
    Apr
    2012
    3:46pm, EDT

    Judge to Sandusky trial lawyers: Stop talking to media

    Former Penn State University assistant coach, Jerry Sandusky speaks to NBC's Bob Costas in a Rock Center exclusive interview.  Sandusky was charged earlier this month with 40 criminal counts accusing him of sexual abuse of minors.

    By Jeff Black, msnbc.com

    Lawyers involved in the child sexual abuse trial of former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky have been ordered to stop talking to the media.

    Pennsylvania Judge John Cleland filed a so-called "gag order" on Monday to keep lawyers or their representatives from making statements about evidence, witnesses or Sandusky’s guilt or innocence.



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    Cleland wrote that the order "is narrowly tailored to achieve its purposes in light of the unprecedented publicity generated by the case" and should help ensure "a fair, impartial and orderly trial."

    Sandusky, 68, is accused of 52 counts of sexual abuse of 10 boys over a 15-year period. The former coach, an assistant to legendary head coach Joe Paterno, has maintained his innocence and has sought to have the charges dismissed. Sandusky has been under house arrest since December.

    Attorneys from both sides have oftern talked to reporters after pretrial hearings. After a hearing last week, prosecutor Joe McGettigan criticized the defense claim that the charges lacked specific information by saying Sandusky received “voluminous documentation of perversions against young children,” The Associated Press reported.

    And Jerry Sandusky famously gave a prime-time interview to NBC’s Bob Costas less than two weeks after he was charged. In the interview Sandusky admitted to showering with boys. Sandusky’s attorney, Joe Amendola, has spent hours talking with reporters outside court proceedings.

    Sandusky’s trial is scheduled to begin on June 5.

    Sandusky was charged in November after a three-year grand jury probe. The indictment led to the firing of Penn State’s legendary head football coach Joe Paterno and university President Graham Spanier.

    NBC's Michelle Franzen reports live at the pre-trial hearing for Jerry Sandusky, who is accused of sexually abusing 10 boys over a 15 year period.

    Two administrators at Penn State, Gary Schultz and Tim Curley, await trial on accusations that they lied to the grand jury and failed to properly report the suspected abuse.

    Paterno died in January after a battle with lung cancer.

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    59 comments

    Can't wait until this is over and he gets to serve time. It's his turn to be abused.

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  • 24
    Mar
    2012
    6:12pm, EDT

    NBC News posts 1998 police report on Jerry Sandusky, psychiatrist's assessment of 'likely pedophile's pattern'

    By msnbc.com staff

    A psychologist warned  Penn State university police in 1998 that former coach Jerry Sandusky's actions fit that of a “likely pedophile’s pattern,” NBC News' Michael Isikoff reported. That assessment, more than a decade before Sandusky was charged with child sex abuse, was contained in documents published by NBC News on Sunday, including the police report.


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    The finding by State College, Pa., psychologist Dr. Alycia A. Chambers, the therapist for one of Sandusky’s alleged victims, was contained in the internal Penn State files of a 1998 police investigation of the former coach for showering and bear hugging her client and another young boy in the school’s athletic locker room, NBC News reported.

    Read the full story: Sandusky labeled 'likely pedophile' in 1998 report

    The Sandusky Files: Read the 1998 police report

    The Sandusky Files: Child psychologist's report

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    1 comment

    let the riots begin, blacks need tv's,sneakers, hoodies

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    Explore related topics: sandusky, jerry-sandusky
  • 24
    Mar
    2012
    11:05am, EDT

    Former Penn State coach Jerry Sandusky labeled 'likely pedophile' in 1998 report

    NBC's Michael Isikoff reports.


    Follow @msnbc_us
    By Michael Isikoff, NBC News

    More than a decade before former Penn State coach Jerry Sandusky was charged with more than 50 counts of child sex abuse, a psychologist warned university police that his actions fit that of a “likely pedophile’s pattern,” NBC News reports.

    The finding by State College, Pa., psychologist Dr. Alycia A. Chambers, the therapist for one of Sandusky’s alleged victims, was contained in the internal Penn State files of a 1998 police investigation of the former coach for showering and bear hugging her client and another young boy in the school’s athletic locker room.


    NBC News has obtained the complete file on the investigation – the police report and assessments by two psychologists who interviewed the boys -- which provides new details about Sandusky’s behavior. It also could raise fresh questions about how school and local authorities handled his case.

    You can read the full story here.

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    17 comments

    lonereb: "Hung Paterno out to dry..."??? Are you kidding me? Listen, when you stand by with full and complete knowledge that someone you work with every day of your life is molesting and raping young boys, and has in fact developed a 'charity' that only serves to bring him a smorgasbord of boys fo …

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    Explore related topics: penn-state, featured, child-sex-abuse, sandusky
  • 1
    Mar
    2012
    9:22pm, EST

    Prosecutors: Jerry Sandusky's alleged victims as young as 8

    By The Associated Press

    HARRISBURG, Pa.  -- A court filing Thursday by prosecutors in the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse case said that the alleged victims ranged in age from 8 to 17 and that crimes involving eight of the boys occurred on the Penn State University campus.

    The attorney general's office issued a "bill of particulars" that said crimes involving one boy took place in Florida and Texas, while another boy was abused at his own school.


    Two of the boys, identified in a grand jury report as Victim 2 and Victim 8, remain unidentified to authorities, according to the court filing.

    In most cases, prosecutors said they could not provide specific dates, noting some crimes occurred over many years, and the alleged victims were children at the time.

    The document, produced at the request of Sandusky's lawyer, discloses details of the allegations that might help them prepare a defense. Prosecutors said assaults happened from 1996 to 2009 and occurred at Sandusky's home, in State College hotels, at Penn State athletic facilities and inside a car.

    For Victim 4, the attorney general's office said offenses took place in Florida in December 1998 and January 1999, when Penn State was playing in the Outback Bowl; and in Texas in December 1999, when Sandusky's final game occurred in the Alamo Bowl.

    The reference to other states comes less than a week after Penn State disclosed a subpoena from the U.S. Attorney's Office in Harrisburg, concrete evidence that a federal investigation is under way.

    Sandusky, 68 is confined to his home while he awaits trial on 52 criminal counts. He denies the allegations, and his lawyer did not immediately reply to a message seeking comment Thursday.

    A spokesman for the attorney general's office declined comment.

    On Wednesday, Judge John Cleland turned down Sandusky's request for a two-month delay that would have given them more time to prepare for trial. Cleland has tentatively scheduled trial to begin with jury selection on May 14. 

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    229 comments

    I find it hard to believe that he suddenly stopped victimizing little boys in 2009. I'm thinking that there just haven't been anyone who was victimized since then, just hasn't reported it yet. If he is guilty, and I believe he is, I hope they throw the book at him.

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  • 13
    Feb
    2012
    11:38am, EST

    Judge allows Sandusky to see grandkids, receive visits

    Judge allows more visitation, won't restrict former coach from going outside. NBC's Chris Clackum reports.

    By msnbc.com staff, NBC News and news services

    HARRISBURG, Pa. -- Jerry Sandusky can see most of his grandchildren while he awaits trial, the judge overseeing the child sex abuse against the former coach said Monday.

    The judge ruled that Sandusky can also use a jury chosen from the State College, Penn., area to hear his case.

    Judge John Cleland ordered the state attorney general's office to disclose the ages of purported victims at the time the crimes are said to have occurred, as well as the times, dates and locations of when prosecutors said they happened.


    "If, after a reasonable attempt it is apparent that a jury cannot be selected within a reasonable time, then I will reconsider this ruling," Cleland wrote.

    The former Penn State assistant football coach appeared in court Friday morning for a hearing that covered conditions of his bail. Sandusky had sought eased bail restrictions that would allow him access to his grandchildren.

    Related: Sandusky hearing covers bail conditions

    In his ruling, Cleland said Sandusky can see the children under their parents' supervision, except for three grandchildren who are the subject of custody litigation.  

    Prosecutors had sought to have Sandusky confined to his home after hearing complaints from neighbors about the safety of children, particularly at an elementary school behind Sandusky's house, but the judge denied that request.

    The attorney general's office also wanted an out-of-county jury for trial, but the judge decided on a local jury.

    According to the ruling, a coordinator may limit the number of people who are allowed to visit Sandusky at any one time. Visits will be limited to two hours, three times a week. Requests to leave the residence in the company of his counsel must be submitted 36 hours in advance.

    Sandusky, 68, faces 52 criminal counts for what prosecutors say was sexual abuse of 10 boys over a 15-year period. He has denied the allegations.

    Sandusky was released on Dec. 8, 2011 after posting a $250,000 bail. He was placed under electronic monitoring and house arrest. According to court documents, Sandusky has 11 grandchildren, whose ages range from 2 to 14 years old.

    Cleland has set a tentative trial date for mid-May.

    The Harrisburg Patriot-News reported Monday that former Penn State athletic director Tim Curley, 57, asked a judge to dismiss the perjury charge he’s facing as part of the Sandusky scandal, saying through his attorney that the late Joe Paterno's testimony would have provided the evidence that prosecutors needed.

    Pittsburgh attorney Caroline Roberto said in a motion filed in Dauphin County court Monday that Paterno’s statements can’t be used at trial, since she had no chance to cross-examine him when he testified before the secret grand jury, the paper reported. Pennsylvania law requires corroboration in a perjury charge.

    Prosecutors accused Curley and former Penn State vice president Gary Schultz of failing to take appropriate action after former assistant coach Mike McQueary told them he had seen Sandusky assault a young boy in the locker room shower and then lying to the investigating grand jury about what they were told. 

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    79 comments

    Biological relatives are given too much access to children when the relative obviously has mental issues. Sandusky should not be allowed in the same room with ANY children, just as Powell should have never had his two sons when he killed them. Sandusky needs serious counseling.

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  • 10
    Feb
    2012
    11:08am, EST

    Sandusky says he feels people have turned on him

    NBC's Michael Isikoff reports.

    By The Associated Press

    Jerry Sandusky walked out of a courthouse Friday where a judge was considering whether to let him see his relatives and friends while he awaits trial on child sex-abuse charges and told reporters Friday he felt people have turned on him.

    The judge could rule early next week on Sandusky's request for greater freedom, including supervised visits with his grandchildren, but Sandusky said he felt people who had been welcomed in his home were now trying to keep him confined indoors. He denies the criminal allegations.

    "I've associated with thousands of young people over the years," said Sandusky, 68, the former Penn State defensive coordinator charged with 52 criminal counts involving 10 victims over 15 years. "And now, all of a sudden, because of allegations and perceptions that have been tried to be created of me, now I can't take our dog on my deck and throw out biscuits to him."


    Sandusky's home borders an elementary school and its playground. After he sought permission to see relatives and friends and leave his home to help lawyers prepare his case, the attorney general's office countered with a court filing that said neighbors expressed concern for the safety of children. A teacher and intern also reported that he had been watching children from his back deck.

    Jerry Sandusky (left), former Penn State defensive coordinator, arrives at the Centre County Courthouse in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania Feb. 10, 2012. Sandusky is facing charges of child sexual abuse.

    Prosecutors want an order that restricts Sandusky to the inside of his home, which a county probation officer said would be unusual for people under in-home detention.

    His lawyer, Joe Amendola, told Judge John Cleland that Sandusky had not sought probation officers' approval for adult visitors, but he was seeking the judge's permission because he sensed the officers were reluctant to do anything out of the ordinary. An investigator said none of the complaints involved Sandusky approaching children.

    State prosecutor Jonelle Eshbach told the judge that a clearly defined trip to help his legal team would be one thing, but she was against letting him have visitors. The allegations include charges he sexually attacked a boy in the basement of his home, while his wife was upstairs.

    "This home was not safe for children for 15 years, and it's not safe for children now," Eshbach said. "We think that the actual contact, visitation with his grandchildren is not a good idea. And we also feel that way with regard to visitors."

    Prosecutors noted that one daughter-in-law strongly objects to increased contact between her children and Sandusky, while Amendola presented the court with letters from Sandusky's children, and notes and drawings from his grandchildren, expressing their desire for increased contact.

    He also noted a court-appointed guardian for grandchildren who are part of a custody dispute found no reason Sandusky couldn't see them.

    "Comparing with a jail situation, were he in jail, he would have certain rights to have visitors," Amendola told Cleland.

    State investigator Anthony Sassano testified that children had noticed Sandusky from their classroom, and that his presence was disrupting school activities.

    One neighbor had used a video camera to document Sandusky's time on his deck, Sassano said. He said Sandusky was seen on the video brushing his dog or letting the dog go outside to play. Sandusky cannot walk the dog because of his bail restrictions, Amendola said.

    Sandusky said after the hearing that his neighbors have changed toward him.

    "Now all of a sudden, these people turn on me when they've been in my home with their kids," he said. "They've attended birthday parties when they've been on that deck. When their kids have been playing in my yard. When their kids have been sled riding when they've asked to sled ride. It's difficult for me to understand."

    His home at the end of a dead-end street has a black and orange "No Trespassing" sign at the driveway, while earlier this week the two properties directly adjacent to his home sported white signs supporting the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network.

    Widener University law professor Wes Oliver, who observed the proceeding, predicted Cleland was unlikely to order Sandusky to remain indoors.

    "Clearly what the prosecution was doing was trying to appease the community," said Oliver, who teaches criminal procedure.

    The hearing concerned various issues that have arisen since Sandusky was first arrested in early November. Cleland indicated he hoped to start trial May 14.

    In an unusual move, prosecutors are seeking a jury from outside Centre County, home of Penn State and a charity for children that Sandusky founded in 1977, The Second Mile.

    Sandusky wants a jury made up of people who live in State College and the surrounding area, and Cleland had him testify to ensure that he was fully aware of the ramifications.

    Sandusky said he was aware that he would not be able to launch an appeal, if he is convicted, on grounds the local jury was biased. Sandusky said there was not a viable alternative in Pennsylvania, where his case has been heavily reported.

    "I don't believe that would matter, relative to any place (else) in this state," he testified.

    Cleland could try to pick a local jury and see whether prosecution concerns are valid about the pervasive publicity and local ties to Penn State and The Second Mile, a charity for at-risk children that Sandusky founded, based in nearby State College.

    Sandusky smiled as he answered the judge's questions, and after the session Amendola told reporters that his client's body language reflected his personality. Amendola said the charges have devastated Sandusky, however.

    "This whole situation, being cast as a pedophile, has crippled him emotionally," he said.

    Another issue, the defense's request for early disclosure of grand jury transcripts, received little attention in the courtroom, and afterward Sandusky defense lawyer Karl Rominger said it may end up being resolved by the judge who supervised the jury.

    Both defense and prosecution said the mid-May trial date may not be realistic, given that the need for other pretrial issues to be ironed out. Amendola said he believes the case can be heard in two weeks, while prosecutors said a month is more likely.

    The scandal led the Penn State trustees to push out university president Graham Spanier and football coach Joe Paterno, who died last month.

    Two Penn State administrators are awaiting trial on charges they lied to a grand jury investigating Sandusky and failed to properly report suspected child abuse. Gary Schultz, a former vice president, and Tim Curley, the athletic director, have both denied the allegations.

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    45 comments

    Shocking!?? A known child sexual offender's only request is to see some children. I don't care if its his grandkids or not. The kids he molested were also close to him. This dude don't care who it is. He just wants his fix.

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  • 7
    Feb
    2012
    9:55pm, EST

    Sandusky attorney: Sex abuse accusers may have 'collaborated'

    By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

    Lawyers representing Jerry Sandusky on Tuesday called for a ream of additional information from the prosecution in the sexual abuse case against the former Pennsylvania State football coach — including phone numbers of the 10 alleged victims — as it attempts to show that the accusers conspired to bring charges, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported.

    "In many cases, the defendant believes the accusers may have collaborated with each other in making these false accusations," according to the 37-page motion filed by defense attorney Joseph Amendola.

    Sandusky, 68, is facing 52 counts of child sex abuse involving 10 boys between 1994 and 2008. Sandusky waived a preliminary hearing, and is slated to proceed to trial.


    The filing asked the judge overseeing the case, John Cleland, to order the prosecution to turn over or disclose redacted details on dozens of police reports, as well as psychiatric evaluations of the alleged victims and interview notes from the three-year long investigation, according to a Philadelphia Inquirer report.

    The report said that Cleland is expected to address this issue, as well Sandusky’s effort to modify his bail conditions at the same proceeding on Friday.

    The coach has been under house arrest since he was released on $250,000 bail in December.

    As NBC News’ Michael Isikoff reported Tuesday, the prosecutors are seeking to tighten bail conditions after receiving reports from anxious neighbors that Sandusky has been spotted sitting on the deck of his house watching schoolchildren in a nearby playground.

    Sandusky had been seeking permission to have supervised visits with his grandchildren, but the prosecutors noted in a filing that the ex-wife of one of Sandusky's sons "strenuously objects to her three minor children having any contact whatsoever with the defendant."

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    10 comments

    Blame the victim. That's always classy. The guy got caught, red-handed, having sex with a little boy. They didn't "collaborate" that.

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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.

    235 comments

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

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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!!

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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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    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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  • 13
    Dec
    2011
    9:52am, EST

    Sandusky vows to 'fight for four quarters'

    Jerry Sandusky vows to fight the child sex-abuse charges. NBC's Michelle Franzen reports.

    By NBC News and wire reports

    BELLEFONTE, Penn. -- Jerry Sandusky, the former Penn State assistant football coach at the center of a child sex abuse case, waived his preliminary hearing Tuesday in a surprise decision that allowed him to avoid facing his accusers and moves him toward a trial.

    Sandusky told reporters as he left the courthouse that he would "stay the course, to fight for four quarters" and "wait for the opportunity to present our side."

    Added Sandusky's lawyer, Joseph Amendola, "We couldn't do that today."

    Lawyer's joke turns out to refer to gay sex hotline

    Audible gasps were heard when the announcement of the waiver was made in the courtroom in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, about 10 miles from the Penn State campus in State College.

    At preliminary hearings, prosecutors must show that they have probable cause to bring the case to trial. Prosecutors in this case were expected to meet that relatively low bar, in part because the case has been through a grand jury. 

    Sandusky has denied the allegations, which led to the departures of longtime Penn State football coach Joe Paterno and the university president. He has been accused of 52 charges of sexual abuse over the span of 12 years involving 10 boys.

    "We are not in any way conceding guilt. Today's decision was a tactical measure," Amendola told reporters outside the courtroom.

    None of the accusers were at the courthouse Tuesday morning, having heard news of the defense waiver before coming in, a court source told NBC News. Eleven witnesses were prepared to testify on Tuesday, NBC's Michael Isikoff reported.

    Sandusky legal move raises questions about strategy

    "This development we believe provides maximum protection to most importantly the victims in this case," said Senior Deputy Attorney General E. Marc Costanzo. "It avoids their having to testify for a second time. They will of course testify at a trial in the case."

    Costanzo said the amount of publicity generated by Sandusky's attorney made the move unexpected, but said the decision to waive was not unusual given the strength of the state's case.

    Sandusky's decision immediately prompted speculation that he may seek a deal to plead guilty in return for a reduced prison sentence.

    "I think the chances are really good" of a plea bargain, said Slade McLaughlin, a lawyer representing Victim One, whom Sandusky is alleged to have abused more than 20 times in 2007 and 2008.

    But there have been no discussions of such a deal, Costanzo said, echoing statements from Amendola, Sandusky's lawyer.

    Sandusky's next court appearance, an arraignment, was scheduled for Jan. 11, but he entered a not guilty plea on Tuesday, and does not need to appear in court for the trial on that date, NBC reported. He remains under house arrest.

    Victims 'do not have to relive' experiences
    Michael Boni, a lawyer for one of the accusers, said he was encouraged by the development. The accusers "do not have to relive the horrors they experience up on the witness stand" by having to testify at the hearing and at trial.

    A lawyer for the boy identified in court documents as Victim 6, a boy whose mother contacted police in 1998 after her son allegedly showered with Sandusky, said waiving the hearing amounted to more abuse of the accusers, who had steeled themselves to testify.

    "It would have been apparent from watching those boys and their demeanor that they were telling the truth," lawyer Howard Janet said.

    Sandusky, in a dark suit, entered the county courthouse through the back door Tuesday morning with his wife, Dottie, at his side. About 50 members of the media and 10 local residents, a few of them with cameras to take pictures, awaited his arrival.

    Witnesses have contended before the grand jury that Sandusky committed a range of sexual offenses against boys as young as 10, assaulting them in hotel swimming pools, the basement of his home in

    State College and in the locker room showers at Penn State, where the 67-year-old former assistant football coach once built a national reputation as a defensive mastermind.

    Live blog: Jerry Sandusky's brief court appearance

    Sandusky has told NBC and The New York Times that his relationship with the boys who said he abused them was like that of an extended family. Sandusky characterized his experiences with the children as "precious times" and said the physical aspect of the relationships didn't involve abuse.

    Sandusky retired from Penn State in 1999, a year after the first known abuse allegation reached police when a mother told investigators Sandusky had showered with her son during a visit to the Penn State football facilities. Accusations surfaced again in 2002, when graduate assistant Michael McQueary reported another alleged incident of abuse to Paterno and other university officials.

    The grand jury probe began only in 2009, after a teen complained that Sandusky, then a volunteer coach at his high school, had abused him.

    Sandusky first groomed him with gifts and trips in 2006 and 2007, then sexually assaulted him more than 20 times in 2008 through early 2009, the teen told the grand jury.

    Sandusky founded The Second Mile, an organization to help struggling children, in 1977, and built it into a major charitable organization, headquartered in State College with offices in other parts of Pennsylvania.

    Two university officials have been charged with perjury and failure to report suspected abuse - athletic director Tim Curley and former university vice president Gary Schultz. Their preliminary hearing is scheduled for Friday in Harrisburg.

    Curley has been placed on leave and Schultz has returned to retirement in the wake of their arrests. The scandal brought down university president Graham Spanier and longtime coach Paterno, who was fired last month.

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    368 comments

    Fight for "four quarters." Deranged. His wife needs to be tried along with him. The amount of money about to be spent on this rapist/diddler is sickening. He is delusional.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: penn-state, sandusky, sex-abuse-scandal
  • 12
    Dec
    2011
    1:52pm, EST

    Ex-colleague faces scrutiny at Sandusky sex-abuse hearing

    Prosecutors will lay out in detail the charges against Jerry Sandusky in a hearing Tuesday before a local judge. NBC's Michael Isikoff reports.

    By M. Alex Johnson, msnbc.com

     

    Follow @MAlexJohnson

     

    Updated at 6:29 p.m. ET: A former coaching colleague who says he blew the whistle on Jerry Sandusky is likely to come under tough scrutiny Tuesday at a preliminary hearing for the former Penn State assistant football coach accused of more than 50 counts of sexual abuse of young boys.

    The preliminary hearing for Sandusky, 63, who has pleaded not guilty, could include as many as 10 of the young men who have accused Sandusky of having assaulted them — the first time they will have told their stories in public. NBC News and msnbc.com are not reporting any of their identities, which will also be shielded in court Tuesday.


    And prosecutors could call Mike McQueary, who is on administrative leave as an assistant coach at Penn State. If they do, Sandusky's attorney says he plans to raise difficult questions about apparent contradictions in McQueary's testimony before a grand jury and what he has said in public.

    The hearing begins at 8:30 a.m. ET in Common Pleas Court in Centre County, Pa., home to the town of State College and the university that Joe Paterno, once a revered figure in college football, made famous. That was before Sandusky — Paterno's longtime defensive coordinator until he unexpectedly resigned in 1999 — was arrested in the child sex cases this year.

    Paterno and the university's president, Graham Spanier, were forced out under criticism that they did too little to stop Sandusky's alleged crimes.

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

    NBC News reported Monday that it had confirmed an account, first reported Sunday in the Harrisburg Patriot-News, that a McQueary family friend testified before the grand jury that McQueary said privately that he hadn't actually seen Sandusky assaulting a 10-year-old boy in 2002.

    NBC News' Michael Isikoff and author Buzz Bissinger discuss the new version of Mike McQueary's story now surfacing.

    That would be at odds with McQueary's own grand jury testimony, in which he said he was an eyewitness to the alleged assault.

    Instead, according to Jonathan Dranov, a colleague of McQueary's father, McQueary told him several times that he had only heard "sex sounds" and hadn't actually seen anything.

    Dranov testified that "he asked McQueary three times if he saw anything sexual and three times McQueary said, no," the Patriot-News reported in an account confirmed by NBC News' national investigative correspondent, Michael Isikoff.

    Joseph Amendola, Sandusky's attorney, said that could prove to be a headache for prosecutors if they call McQueary to testify Tuesday.

    NBCSports: No plea deal talks for Sandusky

    Amendola told NBC station WPXI-TV of Pittsburgh that if "Mike says no" when he asked whether he saw any sexual activity, then prosecutors "have a real problem."

    In a separate interview with NBC News, Amendola also indicated a second defense strategy, suggesting that Sandusky's accusers were working together in a get-rich-scheme against his client.

    "Is it possible that all of them have reacted the same way to the abuse by staying in touch with Jerry and maintaining contact with him? I find that kind of strange, and what that may smack of is some kind of collusion," Amendola said, adding:

    "In some cases, involving at least one of the accusers — that's all the accuser and the family are talking about, what they are going to do with all the money they are going to get."

    But Benjamin Andreozzi, the attorney for one of the accusers, told NBC News that "the idea that these people are coming forward with a financial incentive is ridiculous."

    Andreozzi expanded on his rebuttal in an interview with NBC station WGAL-TV of Lancaster, Pa.: "Given the choice of these victims having a blank check and having Mr. Sandusky assault them, or prefer to have Mr. Sandusky not assault them and get nothing, and I know the answer — they would rather the assault never happened."

    In a related development, Senior Judge John Cleland, who will conduct the hearing, reversed himself Monday and said he would allow news organizations to report the hearing live through Twitter, email and text messages.

    Judge's order allowing live coverage (.pdf)

    Pennsylvania law bans "transmission of communications from the courtroom by telephone, radio, television, or advanced communication technology," but at a hearing Monday requested by news organizations, Cleland decided that the ban applied to "neither 'tweeting' or the simultaneous transmission of a reporter's account or impression of events as they occur in the courtroom."

    The state rule is intended to bar "an audio and/or visual record" of events, Cleland ruled — not the actual reporting of the news.

    NBC News Chief Investigative Correspondent Michael Isikoff and NBC station WPXI-TV of Pittsburgh contributed to this report.

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    368 comments

    Typical of a pedophile to insist upon facing his victims. Another opportunity to intimidate and control.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: sex-abuse, penn-state, crime, featured, sandusky
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