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    APNewsBreak: PSU official's lawyer shapes defense

    HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — The Pennsylvania law requiring some school officials and others to report suspected child abuse does not apply to a Penn State administrator who's accused of keeping quiet about allegations that a former football coach molested a boy in a shower, the administrator's attorney said Sunday.

    The comments by Pittsburgh lawyer Thomas J. Farrell offer a preview of the defense he plans to use on the charge of failing to report faced by his client, Gary C. Schultz, the university's senior vice president for finance and business. Farrell said he will seek to have the charge dismissed.

    The charge is part of a broader case centered on retired Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky, who is accused of sexually abusing eight boys over 15 years. Schultz, 62, and Penn State athletic director Tim Curley, 57, were both charged Saturday with failing to report to state and county officials that a witness told them he saw Sandusky sexually abusing a naked boy in the showers of a team practice facility in 2002.

    Schultz and Curley were both also charged with perjury. Lawyers for all three men say they are innocent.

    Farrell told The Associated Press on Sunday that the mandated reporting rules only apply to people who come into direct contact with children. He also said the statute of limitations for the summary offense with which Schultz is charged is two years, so it expired in 2004.

    The explosive charges are surprising both for what they detail and their contrast to the image of Penn State's football program. Under the leadership of Joe Paterno, who's won more games than any coach in Division I history, the Nittany Lions have become a bedrock in the college game. For more than four decades, Paterno's teams have been revered both for winning, including two national championships, and largely steering clear of trouble.

    Paterno is not implicated in the case.

    "Joe Paterno was a witness who cooperated and testified before the grand jury," said Nils Frederiksen, a spokesman for the state attorney general's office. "He's not a suspect."

    Frederiksen called questions about whether Paterno might testify premature and speculation.

    "That's putting the cart way ahead of the horse," he said. "We're certainly not going to be discussing the lineup of potential witnesses."

    In a statement on Sunday, Paterno said that, if true, the charges were "shocking."

    "The fact that someone we thought we knew might have harmed young people to this extent is deeply troubling," he said. "If this is true we were all fooled, along with scores of professionals trained in such things, and we grieve for the victims and their families. They are in our prayers."

    Paterno said that while he did what he was supposed to do with the one accusation brought to his attention, he was "deeply saddened" by the current allegations.

    The grand jury report that lays out the accusations against the men cites the state's Child Protective Services Law, which requires immediate reporting by doctors, nurses, school administrators, teachers, day care workers, police and others.

    Neither Schultz nor Curley appear to have had direct contact with the boys Sandusky is accused of abusing, including the one involved in the eyewitness account prosecutors say they were given. Prosecutors say Sandusky encountered victims through The Second Mile, a charity he founded for at-risk children.

    An email Sunday to The Associated Press from The Second Mile said the organization was preparing a written statement but did not want to comment at this time because of the criminal investigation.

    "The Second Mile will continue to do everything in our power to be cooperative with authorities and will maintain our focus on doing what is best for the children," the email said.

    Schultz and Curley fielded the complaint from an unnamed graduate assistant, and from Paterno. Two people familiar with the investigation confirmed the identity of the graduate assistant as Mike McQueary, now the team's wide receivers coach and recruiting coordinator. The two spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the names in the grand jury report have not been publicly released.

    McQueary was out of town on a recruiting trip Sunday, according to his father, John McQueary, who declined to comment about the case or say whether they are the two named in the grand jury report.

    The law "applies only to children under the care and supervision of the organization for which he works, and that's Penn State, it's not The Second Mile," Farrell said of his client. "This child, from what we know, was a Second Mile child."

    Messages left later Sunday seeking comment from Frederiksen with the attorney general's office, and from Curley's lawyer, Caroline Roberto, were not immediately returned. Farrell said it was accurate to say the allegations against Curley are legally flawed in the same manner.

    Farrell said he plans to seek dismissal at the earliest opportunity. Both Schultz and Curley are scheduled to turn themselves in at a district judge's office in Harrisburg on Monday.

    "Now, tomorrow is probably not the appropriate time," Farrell said. "We'll bring every legal challenge that is appropriate, and I think quite a few are appropriate."

    As a summary offense, failure to report suspected child abuse carries up to three months in jail and a $200 fine.

    "As far as my research shows, there has never been a reported criminal decision under this statute, and the civil decisions go our way," he said.

    Curley and Schultz met with the graduate assistant about a week and a half after the alleged attack, Pennsylvania Attorney General Linda Kelly said Saturday. There is no indication that anyone at school attempted to find the boy or follow up with the witness, she said.

    "Despite a powerful eyewitness statement about the sexual assault of a child, this incident was not reported to any law enforcement or child protective agency, as required by Pennsylvania law," Kelly said.

    The allegations mirror the sexual abuse scandal that has rocked the Catholic church, albeit on a smaller and narrower scale. As in the church's case, authorities say high-ranking figures were given details about instances of sex abuse and failed to share them with law enforcement or child-welfare agencies.

    Curley and Schultz also are accused of perjury for their testimony to the grand jury that issued a 23-page report on the matter Friday, the day before state prosecutors charged them. Sandusky was arrested Saturday and charged with 40 criminal counts.

    Curley denied that the assistant had reported anything of a sexual nature, calling it "merely 'horsing around,'" the grand jury report said. But he also testified that he barred Sandusky from bringing children onto campus and that he advised Penn State President Graham Spanier of the matter.

    The grand jury said Curley was lying, Kelly said, adding that it also deemed portions of Schultz's testimony not to be credible.

    Schultz told the jurors he also knew of a 1998 investigation involving sexually inappropriate behavior by Sandusky with a boy in the showers the football team used.

    But despite his job overseeing campus police, he never reported the 2002 allegations to any authorities, "never sought or received a police report on the 1998 incident and never attempted to learn the identity of the child in the shower in 2002," the jurors wrote. "No one from the university did so."

    Farrell said Schultz "should have been required only to report it to his supervisor, which he did."

    Schultz reports to Penn State president Graham Spanier, who testified before the grand jury that Schultz and Curley came to him with a report that a staff member was uncomfortable because he'd seen Sandusky "horsing around" with a boy. Spanier was not charged.

    About the perjury charge, Farrell said: "We're going to have a lot of issues with that, both factual and legal. I think there's a very strong defense here."

    The university is paying legal costs for Curley and Schultz because the allegations against them concern how they fulfilled their responsibilities as employees, spokeswoman Lisa Powers said.

     
    • Barbara  •  Las Vegas, United States  •  6 mths ago
      What a group of despicable men. This story actually made my stomach turn. "Prosecutors say Sandusky encountered victims through The Second Mile, a charity he founded for at-risk children." Those poor boys. Thought they had found someone who was going to give a #$%$ about them and then this happens.
      • curly moe larry 6 mths ago
        time for a revolution...the Arabs did it...we can too...what kind of #$%$ doesn't report child abuse?!?!?!? Oh yeah, a Catholic #$%$
      • dklf14 6 mths ago
        College football at it's best.
      • Not Slick willy 6 mths ago
        Kiethy old boy google 'rabbi child molesters!" and then shut up ....
    • jsf  •  6 mths ago
      Wow! Knew about it but did not call cops because no law said they had to. Even if that is the law, how awful.
      • john 6 mths ago
        I wouldn't call the cops either, at least not until I'd beaten this guy to a bloody pulp. You do not treat children that way around me, period. You will find justice quick and sure.
      • Montague 6 mths ago
        Americans have decided that if a thing is lawful, then it must be ethical. Nothing could be further from the truth. What is lawful is not always even close to ethical.
      • Gary 6 mths ago
        Change the #$%$ law!!
    • Denise  •  6 mths ago
      Yeah, everyone would like to think they are exempt from the law. Lawyers are loophole seeking bottom feeders who thrive on others misery.
      • Keith M 6 mths ago
        Truer words were never spoken Denise! They need to get them all!
      • Corey 6 mths ago
        So why do we let them run our gov't?
      • Tim 6 mths ago
        John Adams was a lawyer. Abraham Lincoln was a lawyer. James Madison was a lawyer. Thomas Jefferson was a lawyer. Every member of the supreme court, white black male female liberal conservative...every one of them is a lawyer.

        I know dozens of lawyers, and not one of them is as you describe.
    • almostnuts  •  Houston, United States  •  6 mths ago
      right. now total amnesia will set in. i can hear it now. i don't remember, i don't know, i didn't see anything. remember if nobody talks, everybody walks.
    • arcaze  •  Pittsburgh, United States  •  6 mths ago
      I believe that a shyster lawyer will do anything that he's paid for to get these guys off. Penn State had better distance themselves from these schmucks ASAP.
      • snoops 6 mths ago
        The collage professors are the one's educating the lawyers so its payback time ?
      • Bill 6 mths ago
        their lawyers are paid by penn state - i say give the program the death penalty
      • arcaze 6 mths ago
        D I S T A N C E------- accomplished!!!!
    • Bernie  •  Ypsilanti, United States  •  6 mths ago
      So maybe they didn`t break that law..but c`mon guys, what ever happened to integrity and honesty? By not reporting it you show you lacking in compassion for the kids. you should be fired. period !!! I`m a PSU grad, 1955, and i`m ashamed of all involved here.
      • snoops 6 mths ago
        And back then queers stayued in the closet. We need to put all of them back there including the priest.
      • Paul 6 mths ago
        Definitely did not do what was right. Even if they knew the law, protecting one of their own over a case of abuse to a child is completely wrong.
    • Mick  •  Greensboro, United States  •  6 mths ago
      It seams that this kind of behavior is happening at every level of society, in homes, pre schools, elementary schools, high schools, colleges, churches of all denominations, scouting, sports etc. If we incarcerate all the perps. and those who turn their heads, there would not be enough prisons to house them all. I think we need to raise the awareness of the general population of the long term effects to victims. We need to train children on how to protect themselves and how to be aware of inappropriate behavior. We need to teach parents of the tell tail signs to watch for.
    • my man  •  6 mths ago
      anyone who does not report sexual abuse or any other type of abuse is just as guilty as the perp...go after these ivy leauge administration parasites...accountibility...
    • mackee  •  6 mths ago
      I'm thinking of those young boys who had to endure all this and has to relive every moment when this goes to court. I pray for them and their family.
    • Gary  •  6 mths ago
      Allowing administration who 'looked the other way' to remain in their positions at the school leaves the door open for more sodomy (or any other felony) to occur. I hope the number of students hoping to enroll at the school drops dramatically, but fear the lure of a prestige education will erase any determination to penalize them through boycott
    • Raul Fernando  •  Kingsville, United States  •  6 mths ago
      I don't care if they are not guilty of any crime, the world we live in is a suckier place because of the Schultzes and the Curleys among us. I am no angel, but I would never have a good night's sleep if I knew a man was raping children and I could have stopped it.
    • Lori P  •  6 mths ago
      It's a sex abuse club for fat ugly old white guys to bang boys on the Penn State grounds, don't ask don't tell. These at risk boys trusted men who raped them in showers. Unwanted anal sex hurts try it and find out what these boys endured by that fat ugly old chalky guy slobbering all over them. PUKE!
    • Orang-Utan  •  6 mths ago
      The university is paying legal costs for Curley and Schultz because the allegations against them concern how they fulfilled their responsibilities as employees,
      There go tuition rates to pay for this Malfeasence and settlements.
    • Tom Foolery  •  6 mths ago
      So certain people are exempt from reporting a crime? I never knew that. I always said that when they make laws they should also provide a list for whom the law doesn't apply.
    • Scott S  •  6 mths ago
      Lawyers...proving that their decency is nothing more than a bottomless pit
    • bobob  •  Indianapolis, United States  •  6 mths ago
      so he is not by law required? You see or know that a child is in danger you #$%$ well do something about it. Shame on Penn State..or should be say Pen State?
    • Ella  •  6 mths ago
      "Penn State official EXEMPT from reporting child abuse"???? EXEMPT from reporting a child being sexual molested???? What kind of sick #%*# $#* #%^*#*#'s are we dealing with here??
    • drandyd  •  6 mths ago
      And lawyers wonder why they are despised.
    • TKD  •  6 mths ago
      Whether the law applies to them or the statute of limitation has expired they both need to resign or be fired.

      There is no way it is morally OK that they did not do anything to help the boys.
    • Bob  •  6 mths ago
      Lowlife Gary C. Schultz may be off the hook legally but that doesn't mean that he won't be run out of town and his job for being a total failure as a human being. He'd be smart to resign right now and run for his life.
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