Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Former Penn State assistant gets $1.7M in whistleblo­wer fees

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG, PA. >> A former Penn State assistant coach will be getting his legal fees paid after winning a whistleblo­wer claim over his treatment by the university after Jerry Sandusky’s child molestatio­n arrest.

Judge Thomas Gavin on Thursday granted Mike McQueary’s lawyers $1.7 million for their work on the case. He had awarded McQueary nearly $5 mil- lion in November.

The judge wrote that it would not be reasonable to expect whistleblo­wers to put their jobs and paychecks at risk in reporting suspected wrongdoing, as well as to fund their own legal representa­tion.

Making whistleblo­wers financiall­y whole, he said, “will put teeth in the statute and will further its goal of encouragin­g others to expose wrongdoing.”

Penn State said its lawyers had not analyzed Gavin’s decision, and McQueary’s lawyer did not respond to a phone message seeking comment. Earlier this week, the university’s lawyers filed an additional document as they seek to have the verdict overturned, damages lowered or a new trial ordered.

McQueary’s father, John McQueary, said Friday his son knew about the judge’s decision but was at the gym and unlikely to offer his re- action.

“Until this thing gets settled, I mean paid, I don’t think he’s going to be interested in making comments just yet,” said John McQuear y, who along with Mike McQueary testified last week for prosecutor­s in the criminal case against former Penn State president Graham Spanier.

The judge’s new order also gave McQueary $15,000 for a bowl bonus he would have earned if the school had not suspended him from coaching after Sandusky’s arrest in November 2011. Penn State was also ordered to pay about $34,000 for transcript­s, witness fees and other costs.

A jury in October also granted McQueary $7.3 million for defamation and misreprese­ntation. Those claims were tried along with the whistleblo­wer allegation­s, which under state law were decided by the judge.

Mike McQueary has said he happened to encounter Sandusky, then retired after decades as a Nittany Lions defensive coach, sexually abusing a boy in a team shower on a Friday night in February 2001.

McQueary reported it the next morning to thenhead coach Joe Paterno, who in turn alerted the athletic director, Tim Curley. Curley and then-vice president Gary Schultz subsequent­ly met with McQueary, but police and child welfare authoritie­s were never notified.

Earlier this month, Curley and Schultz struck deals with the attorney general’s office and pleaded guilty to a single misdemeano­r count of child endangerme­nt. They both testified against Spanier.

Spanier was convicted of misdemeano­r child endangerme­nt. All three men await sentencing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States