Waterloo Region Record

Sandusky affair cost Penn State billions

- Mark Scolforo and Marc Levy

HARRISBURG, PA. — Two former Penn State University administra­tors pleaded guilty Monday to misdemeano­ur child endangerme­nt for their roles in the Jerry Sandusky child molestatio­n case, more than five years after the scandal engulfed the school and led to coach Joe Paterno’s downfall.

Ex-athletic director Tim Curley and former university vice-president Gary Schultz originally were charged with felonies.

The reduced charge is punishable by up to five years in prison.

Penn State ex-president Graham Spanier was also charged in the case.

He was not in the Harrisburg courtroom Monday morning, though his attorneys were. His prosecutio­n appears to be moving forward, with jury selection scheduled for next week.

The three handled a 2001 complaint by a graduate assistant who said he saw Sandusky, a retired defensive football coach, sexually abusing a boy in a team shower. They did not report the matter to police or child welfare authoritie­s but told Sandusky he was not allowed to bring children to the campus.

Sandusky was not arrested until a decade later. He was convicted in 2012 of 45 counts of sexual abuse of 10 boys, and is serving a 30- to 60-year state prison term.

Shortly after Sandusky’s arrest, Paterno was fired.

Schultz and Curley were arrested in 2011, and Spanier in 2012.

The three former administra­tors at Penn State’s flagship campus in State College had also faced charges of conspiracy. Each felony count carried the possibilit­y of seven years in prison.

Their case has dragged on for years because of a dispute about their representa­tion during a grand jury appearance by Penn State’s then-chief counsel Cynthia Baldwin. That legal fight prompted the Superior Court decision that threw out several charges, including perjury and obstructio­n.

Penn State’s costs related to the Sandusky scandal are approachin­g a quarter-billion dollars.

The scandal’s overall cost to the school includes a recent $12 million verdict in the whistleblo­wer and defamation case brought by former assistant coach Mike McQueary, the ex-graduate assistant whose testimony helped convict Sandusky in 2012.

The university has settled with 33 people over allegation­s they were sexually abused by Sandusky, and has made total payments to them of $93 million.

The NCAA also levied a $48 million penalty against the university that is now funding antichild-abuse efforts in Pennsylvan­ia.

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