Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

High court rebuffs Sandusky appeal

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG, Pa. — Jerry Sandusky won’t get a fresh chance to argue in state court he should get a new trial, seven years after the former Penn State assistant football coach was convicted of molesting 10 boys.

Pennsylvan­ia’s Supreme Court on Wednesday turned down Sandusky’s request that it review a Superior Court decision earlier this year rejecting most of his arguments.

His lawyer says he was surprised and disappoint­ed by the justices’ decision.

“We’re very disappoint­ed. We were very hopeful the Supreme Court would hear our appeal, because it’s a very strong appeal,” Sandusky defense attorney Al Lindsay said.

He said it is likely Sandusky will seek help from the federal courts, and he expects to meet with Sandusky later this week at the State Correction Institutio­n at Laurel Highlands.

Jacklin Rhoads, spokeswoma­n for the state attorney general’s office, said prosecutor­s were pleased with the high court’s decision.

Superior Court had also ordered Sandusky be resentence­d because mandatory minimum guidelines were improperly applied. Ms. Rhoads said the resentenci­ng, on hold pending the high court decision about the appeal, can now proceed.

Sandusky’s November 2011 arrest led to the firing of his longtime boss, head football coach Joe Paterno, and the forcing out of then- university president Graham Spanier.

Mr. Paterno died in 2012, months before Sandusky was convicted of 45 counts of child sexual abuse.

Sandusky had filed a multifacet­ed appeal that argued the investigat­ion, trial and sentencing were replete with errors, but the threejudge Superior Court panel was largely unswayed in February, followed by the one- page order issued Wednesday.

Sandusky, 75, was sentenced in 2012 to 30 to 60 years. Mr. Spanier and two retired Penn State administra­tors, vice president Gary Schultz and athletic director Tim Curley, were convicted in 2017 of child endangerme­nt.

A federal judge in April threw out Mr. Spanier’s misdemeano­r conviction, less than a day before he had been due to turn himself in to begin serving a jail sentence. The attorney general’s office is appealing the Spanier ruling.

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