The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Spanier wants his conviction overturned

- By Mark Scolforo

A lawyer for Graham Spanier argued to a Pennsylvan­ia appeals court Wednesday that too much time had passed for the former Penn State president to be charged with endangerin­g the welfare of children over his handling of a complaint about Jerry Sandusky.

A three-judge Superior Court panel heard oral argument about whether to vacate or uphold the misdemeano­r guilty verdict issued last year against the 69-year-old Spanier.

He was found criminally liable for his response to a 2001 report that former assistant football coach Sandusky had been seen sexually abusing a boy in a team shower. Spanier, who did not testify, has said the attack was characteri­zed to him at the time as horseplay.

He is arguing a two-year statute of limitation­s applies and had expired by the time he was charged in 2012. The argument in court on Wednesday focused in part on a post-trial ruling by the judge that cited an exception to the two-year limit in cases where someone under 18 has been victimized by a sexual offense.

Under those circumstan­ces, which expressly include the crime of child endangerme­nt, charges may be brought until the victim Penn State president Graham Spanier, left, and former Penn State University assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky

turns 50.

Jurors in the Spanier case acquitted him of engaging in a course of conduct — a decision that Spanier’s lawyer argued should also affect how the statute of limitation­s applies. Jurors ruled that Spanier’s crime consisted of his acts in 2001, his lawyer argued, so the crime did not continue in subsequent years by a lack of action to protect children against Sandusky.

Spanier attorney Bruce Merenstein said the provision cited by Judge John Boccabella’s post-trial opinion defending the verdict had never before been raised, preventing the defense team from addressing it in a meaningful way.

“The time to do it was before trial,” Merenstein told a three-judge panel. “You simply cannot raise that exception after-the-fact.”

Spanier was acquitted of conspiracy and a second count of child endangerme­nt. He was sentenced to two months in jail and two months of house arrest but remains free on bail pending appeal.

The university said Wednesday Spanier remains a tenured faculty member on administra­tive leave. Under a separation agreement, he was paid $600,000 annually for five years, payments that ended three months ago. His current salary, like that of most other Penn State faculty members, is not disclosed by the school.

At sentencing, Spanier told the judge he regretted he “did not intervene more forcefully.” Two of the top administra­tors under Spanier when he led Penn State, then-athletic director Tim Curley and then-vice president Gary Schultz, pleaded guilty to child endangerme­nt and testified against Spanier.

Boccabella told all three defendants last year that they “ignored the opportunit­y to put an end to his crimes when they had a chance to do so” and that he was “appalled that the common sense to make a phone call did not occur,” a transgress­ion Boccabella said “sort of robs my faith of who we are as adults and where we are going.”

In a February 2001 email, Spanier told Curley and Schultz he approved a proposed response to the 2001 complaint that involved telling Sandusky he should seek profession­al help and could not to bring children into university facilities. The administra­tors did not plan to inform police or child-welfare authoritie­s.

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 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ??
GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE

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