Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Prosecutor: Not reporting Jerry Sandusky let evil ‘run wild’

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HARRISBURG >> The failure of Penn State’s former president to report child molestatio­n accusation­s against Jerry Sandusky allowed evil “to run wild,” prosecutor­s said Tuesday at the start of Graham Spanier’s trial. A defense attorney accused prosecutor­s of trying to “criminaliz­e a judgment call.”

Opening statements got underway in the long-delayed criminal trial against Spanier, who faces felony charges of child endangerme­nt and conspiracy for how he handled a 2001 report that the former assistant football coach had abused a boy in a team shower.

Sandusky, a former assistant football coach, was convicted in 2012 of sexually abusing 10 boys and is serving decades in prison.

Two former Penn State officials took plea deals in the case last week — former vice president Gary Schultz and former athletic director Tim Curley. They are expected to testify along with a victim of Sandusky.

Deputy Attorney General Patrick Schulte told jurors that Spanier and others agreed not to report Sandusky and, as a result, “evil in the form of Jerry Sandusky was allowed to run wild.”

Defense attorney Sam Silver disputed any notion that his client and others didn’t respond to the 2001 complaint about Sandusky.

“They made a decision they believed was appropriat­e under the circumstan­ces,” he said, accusing prosecutor­s of trying to “criminaliz­e a judgment call.”

Schulte told the jury of seven women and five men about a May 1998 incident in which a mother reported Sandusky showering with her son, and said Schultz informed Spanier “because the president of the university should be apprised of something like that.”

After a month the investigat­ion by police and child welfare agencies ended with no charges being filed.

After graduate assistant Mike McQueary’s complained about Sandusky showering with a boy in a team facility, Spanier, Schultz and Curley decided to talk to Sandusky and bar him from bringing children onto campus rather than report him to child-welfare authoritie­s, Schulte said. They told him if he didn’t get help they would report him, he said.

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