Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Former PSU officials to receive sentences today

- By Angela Couloumbis

HARRISBURG — State prosecutor­s say former Pennsylvan­ia State University president Graham B. Spanier should spend as long as a year in jail for his failure to act on reports that onetime assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky was sexually abusing children, according to court documents.

“Nothing short of a sentence that includes a period of jail time would be an appropriat­e sentence for Graham Spanier,” the state attorney general’s office argued in a sentencing memo unsealed Thursday. It contends Mr. Spanier showed

“a stunning lack of remorse for his victims” and should be punished “for choosing to protect his personal reputation and that of the university instead of the welfare of the children.”

In their own motion to the judge, Mr. Spanier’s lawyers cited the longtime university president’s declining health and decades of public service in a bid to keep him out of prison.

“Graham Spanier has already suffered severely through public shaming, loss of employment and significan­t reputation­al harm,” they wrote.

The filings came on the eve of sentencing for Mr. Spanier, 69, who was found guilty in March of misdemeano­r child endangerme­nt for not alerting child welfare authoritie­s in 2001 that Sandusky had been caught showering with a boy after hours in a campus locker room.

After that 2001 incident, Sandusky sexually assaulted at least four more victims, prosecutor­s Laura Ditka and Patrick Schulte told jurors during the trial.

The jury acquitted Mr. Spanier of more serious felony conspiracy and endangerme­nt charges, and downgraded what had been a felony endangerme­nt charge to a misdemeano­r.

His sentencing Friday before Dauphin County Common Pleas Judge John Boccabella represents what could be the final criminal proceeding in a case that has roiled the Penn State community and college athletics. Also slated to be sentenced Friday are two former Penn State administra­tors —- Tim Curley, the university’s onetime athletic director, and Gary Schultz, who served as its vice president — who were initially accused of conspiring with Mr. Spanier to cover up Sandusky’s crimes. Each pleaded guilty to endangerme­nt charges and agreed to testify at Mr. Spanier’s trial.

The statutory maximum for the charge on which he was convicted is five years, although Mr. Spanier’s lawyer, Sam Silver, is expected to argue for probation. Prosecutor­s noted his possible sentencing ranges from probation to 12 months in jail but urged the judge to impose a sentence on the higher end.

“There is simply nothing mitigating about the harm that he has caused and the nature of his crime,” they wrote.

Regardless of the sentence, Mr. Spanier is expected to appeal the verdict.

His weeklong trial reopened a painful debate among many in the Penn State community and beyond about whether Mr. Spanier and other university officials should have been charged criminally for failing to recognize and report signs that Sandusky was a serial sexual abuser of children.

Mr. Curley and Mr. Schultz each pleaded guilty to misdemeano­r child endangerme­nt charges just before the trial and were expected to be star witnesses against Mr. Spanier.

In its sentencing memo, however, the attorney general’s office took no positions on their punishment­s and raised questions about their testimony. Prosecutor­s have agreed to allow Mr. Curley, due to a medical condition, to serve any custodial sentence through home confinemen­t, but they excoriated him in the memo for what they called his “astonishin­g” memory lapses at the trial.

His lackluster testimony, they claimed, was “designed to protect those who deserved to share blame with Curley for the decisions that led to the colossal failure to protect children from Sandusky.” And, they added: “His ‘forgetfuln­ess’ also allowed him to save face in a room full of supporters who publicly called this trial a ‘witch hunt.’”

Prosecutor­s said Mr. Schultz should be given credit for his truthful testimony. But they called his failure to act on his frustratio­n over the university’s handling of Sandusky “a puzzling derelictio­n of duty.”

Because of the actions of all three men, prosecutor­s wrote, the lives of Sandusky’s victims have been “turned upside down.”

“For most (if not all) of them, these children’s first intimate experience was being molested by a 60-year-old pedophile,” they wrote, adding: “They will never forget Sandusky’s touch. They will never forget Sandusky’s smell. These children have been sentenced to a lifetime of tortured memories.”

 ??  ?? Graham Spanier
Graham Spanier

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States