PATERNO MUST GO TO JAIL

This is very simple. Anyone who has read this blog for the last couple years knows how I feel about the Catholic Church and their cover-up of priests fucking little boys. My unequivical position has been and continues to be that anyone within the Catholic Church heirarchy, up to and including the Pope, that knew about children being molested and fucked by predator priests and did not report it to the police is as guilty as the predator and should spend the rest of their lives in the general population of a prison.

Joe Paterno and the President of Penn State University were told that Sandusky molested a young boy in the showers of their lockeroom, 9 years ago. They did not report it to the police. Sandusky then went on to molest and fuck many young boys over the following years. Paterno & the President of Penn State are as guilty as Sandusky and should go to jail. They knowingly chose to protect the “reputation” of Penn State at the expense of innocent children whose lives have been ruined by this monster. They made the wrong fucking choice and they deserve to go to jail.

THERE IS NO MIDDLE GROUND HERE!!!!!

Powerful football coaches and powerful cardinals and bishops have done the exact same thing. They have protected their power and reputations by allowing innocent boys to have their lives ruined. They deserve to burn in the deepest depths of hell.  

NATION: Paterno’s illustrious career faces tarnished end

Published: Tuesday, November 08, 2011

By Dan K. Thomasson
[email protected]

Few things are quite as pathetic as a revered hero who stays around too long and suddenly becomes embroiled in a scandal that threatens to undo the saintly image most everyone expected he would take to his grave.

But that is exactly what octogenarian Joe Paterno faces only a few short weeks after becoming the coach with the most victories in college football history.

It turns out that the longtime mastermind of the Pennsylvania State University’s elite gridiron program reportedly knew for nine years or so but did nothing about the degrading sexual activities of one of his most trusted assistants, his former defensive coordinator who was arrested over the weekend on charges of abusing eight boys over 15 years. Jerry Sandusky had been running a foundation to help needy children.

What in the world was Paterno thinking?

I must confess here that I never have been a fan of his. I thought among other things that he didn’t have the grace to give the proper credit for his team’s successes to those who for most of the last years actually have been running things.

But my real antipathy toward him stems from an incident involving my youngest son, who as a budding player was invited to Paterno’s elite summer camp and came back angry and dismayed to report being snubbed when he and other attendees approached the great man to say hello.

If the Pennsylvania Aattorney General’s report can be believed, and there is no reason not to, Paterno was informed in 2002 by a graduate assistant who said he saw the defensive leader, Sandusky, abusing a 10-year-old boy in the locker room.

Paterno informed the athletic director but no one told the proper authorities. It seems obvious the school was more concerned about the potential damage to its program than the welfare of the youngsters. They reportedly just told him not to bring anymore kids around the football program.

That callous disregard can be expected to cost the university big time. Two of the officials, the vice president for finance and the athletic director, allegedly have been charged with perjury and failing to report a crime. Meanwhile, the university’s president foolishly issued a statement supporting the two officials.

Paterno has not been charged, but the impact of this is nearly as bad for him as if he had been, considering the depravity of the situation and his failure to personally take the case to law enforcement officials.

I couldn’t help but compare this to a widely reported case involving a 26-year-old man convicted in Florida the other day of having pornographic images of children on his computer. It was his first arrest, he had no record of any kind, and there was no evidence that he had ever been accused of molesting any one, child or adult. He was given life imprisonment without parole solely on the basis of having downloading the images.

He had turned down an offer to plead guilty in exchange for a 20-year term. So the prosecutor filed more serious charges. His sentence was exactly the same as is expected for a murderer recently convicted in an unbelievably brutal slaying of a yoga-store employee here.

If he had abused or molested a child, the young man would have been given a much lighter sentence. The judge’s startling ruling, based on the argument that anyone downloading these images is guilty of furthering the depraved child porn industry, is being appealed.

In the Penn State case, Sandusky faces a long time in prison if convicted. It may be a life sentence, given that he is 67. He is out on $100,000 bond. I would have made it $1 million.

But the troubling question remains as to the responsibility, morally and legally, of those who aided and abetted his despicable actions by remaining silent.

No mitigating explanation of any kind would be acceptable from any of them. There might be a tendency to excuse Paterno because of his age. But if his mental faculties are good enough to run a major college football program, they’re good enough to know right from wrong.

How sad for the coach who has stayed around too long.

Email Dan K. Thomasson, former editor of the Scripps Howard News Service, at [email protected].

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76 Comments
Stucky
Stucky
November 9, 2011 7:36 am

sss

I already made my views known.

Joe Pa probably covered his ass LEGALLY. As you rightly stated, that part must play out in the courts.

However, in the Court of Public Opinion, did he do the MORAL thing? The people answer with a resounding, “NO!!!”. You are pissed off because people have an OPINION about the MORALITY of Joe Pa’s bare minimum legal actions.

Why is that? Why do you pretend to take the moral high ground here (from purely a statutory legal point of view) … a position ONLY held by you?

Oh, one last thing.

Sandusky was seen smoking Mary Jane just prior to the event.

I’ll bet that changes everything for you. heh heh.

Buckhed
Buckhed
November 9, 2011 9:26 am

As I recall there was a guy years ago who’s son was kidnapped and raped by a pedophile . When they were bringing him into court the boys dad killed him on the spot. A jury found him innocent based on emotional distress. A perfect ending to a sad story !

llpoh
llpoh
November 9, 2011 5:17 pm

Buck – happened an airport in Texas, by memory, and occured live on TV as he was being extradited back to Texas from wherever. The father pretended he was making a phone call, and as the marshalls walked the guy by, the father turned and shot him dead. Good riddance.

howard in nyc
howard in nyc
November 9, 2011 7:01 pm

SSS wrote: “But the question of Paterno’s “responsibility” to report more of this to authorities, which he certainly did in his grand jury testimony, is STILL WAY OPEN TO QUESTION, SPECIFICALLY WHAT EXACTLY DID PATERNO KNOW?”

__________

here is a paragraph from the grand jury pesentment/statement of facts, that summarizes the testimony paterno gave eight years after the incident:

“Joseph V. Paterno testified to receiving the graduate assistant’s report at his home on a Saturday morning. Paterno testified that the graduate assistant was very upset. Paterno called Tim Curley (“Curley”), Penn State Athletic Director and Paterno’s immediate superior, to his home the very next day, a Sunday, and reported to him that the graduate assistant had seen Jerry Sandusky in the Lasch Building showers fondling or doing something of a sexual nature to a young boy.”

showers. fondling. sexual nature. young boy.

making the very safe assumption that the GJ statement of fact is an accurate representation of paterno’s sworn testimony, what he himself says he was told one day after the rape is crystal clear. no open question–just read what joepa said himself.

showers. fondling. sexual nature. young boy.

there is no defense for his simply ‘passing the buck’ by telling the AD, then just business as usual.

oh, excuse me. they took his parking space away, and made it clear ‘don’t fuck your little boys on campus anymore’. and this is ignoring the 1998 incident, giving the incredibly wide assumption that paterno was unaware of that quashed police investigation of his longtime friend and assistant coach.

i could give a fuck about paterno’s strict legal duty to report to the police or child welfare authorities. i care about his abject failure as a human being. his active abetting of a child rapist.

of course i would not throw him in jail on the basis of what is established as fact at this point. but he is damn lucky to not be charged criminally at this time. i’m no lawyer, much less an assistant district attorney, but there sure as shit is enough smoke to bring to a judge or to a grand jury in seeking criminal charges. i am betting it was a shrewd tactical choice by the district attorney to leave joepa out of the indictments; shrewd judging by the irrational support for the coach who won hundreds of games, but lost when it came to doing a simple right thing. probably on repeat occasions.

paterno is unfit to continue in his job for a single minute. paterno’s failure to act beyond covering his ass and telling his boss is shameful and horrific. his self-serving public statements and retirement announcement are further evidence he has no judgment when it comes to the university and the young men he is charged with leading.

llpoh
llpoh
November 9, 2011 7:14 pm

What i find incredible is that Paterno was able to call his boss and get him to come to his house. That says it all. If my most senior manager wants to see me on a Sunday, he is going to get his ass down to MY fucking house. End of story. Paterno has clearly believed he is the head dick for a very long time, and his actions confirm it. Everything and everyone is his to command. Right downto his leaving at season’s end. He should be shown the door now. End of story.

howard in nyc
howard in nyc
November 9, 2011 8:49 pm

of course, the true chain of authority at most universities is winning football coach is ahead of the athletic director.

at psu–you think joepa had taken a single order/instruction/directive from curley the entire time curley was the ad? probably less than 1/5th joepa’s entire tenure at the place.

‘i told my boss and assumed he would handle it properly’

would be laughable on its face, except for the tragic context.