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    PSU scandal stirs debate over abuse reporting laws

    NEW YORK (AP) — When Joe Paterno, the ousted Penn State football coach, was confronted with a possible case of child rape, he notified his bosses rather than call the police or the child-abuse hotline. That was all Pennsylvania law required him to do, yet in most other states the failure to call could be a crime.

    In more than 40 states, the prevailing policy is that such reports must be made to police or child-protection authorities swiftly and directly, with no option for delegating the task to others and then not following through.

    Already, the Penn State scandal has sparked calls for Pennsylvania to toughen its law. State Rep. Kevin Boyle says he will introduce a bill that would require mandated reporters — including school and hospital employees — to notify police themselves rather than pass their information on to superiors at work.

    "It is clear that a loophole exists in our law," Boyle said. "My legislation would close that loophole by requiring those who are aware of the abuse to report it to law enforcement authorities, rather than simply following an in-house chain of command."

    A review by The Associated Press of the abuse-reporting laws of all 50 states showed that Pennsylvania is one of only about a half-dozen states where the protocol for staff members of schools, hospitals and other institutions is to notify the person in charge in the event of suspected child abuse. That superior is then legally obliged to report to the authorities.

    In the Penn State case, the superiors notified in 2002 by Paterno — the athletic director, Tim Curley, and a vice president, Gary Schultz — have been charged with failing to report the suspected abuse. They deny wrongdoing. State authorities say that failure enabled former assistant coach Jerry Sandusky to perpetrate additional sexual assaults on boys. Through a lawyer, he says he is innocent.

    According to a 2010 database compiled by the National District Attorney's Association, other states with provisions resembling Pennsylvania's — giving institutional staff the option of reporting suspected abuse to their superiors — include Virginia, Georgia, Massachusetts, Missouri and South Dakota.

    These policies "defy common sense and should be changed," said Victor Veith, a former prosecutor who heads the National Child Protection Training Center in Winona, Minn.

    The policy, as it unfolded at Penn State, risks "putting the fox in charge of the henhouse," wrote social worker Julia Tilley, a Penn State graduate, in an op-ed this week for the Patriot-News of Harrisburg, Pa.

    Far more prevalent across the country are laws that mandate informing law enforcement authorities. In some states, such as Michigan, New York and Hawaii, the employees must also notify the person in charge at their institution. But many of the laws explicitly warn that informing one's superior does not relieve the employee of the obligation to personally report the suspected abuse to outside authorities.

    For example, the Texas statute stipulates that teachers, nurses, doctors, day-care workers and various other mandated reporters "may not delegate to or rely on another person to make the report."

    Virtually every state, including Pennsylvania, mandates that people in certain designated jobs file reports if they suspect child abuse. In Pennsylvania's case, this includes a wide range of health-care workers, school employees, child-welfare workers, members of the clergy and law enforcement personnel.

    But at least 18 states have broader language in their laws saying that every person, regardless of job, who suspects child abuse has a legal duty to report to the authorities.

    Among them is Indiana, where the statute says, "Any person who has reason to believe that a child is a victim of abuse and neglect must report."

    Jim Hmurovich, president of the Chicago-based advocacy group Prevent Child Abuse America, is a former director of Indiana's Division of Family and Children. He supports the state's broad reporting requirement, even though he said its impact is hard to quantify.

    "It gave everyone some comfort that they were doing the right thing legally if they report suspicions of abuse," he said. "If children are so important to us, shouldn't it be all our responsibility to make sure they're safe?"

    Other experts, however, suggest these broad-based reporting laws are virtually unenforceable and — if somehow they were strictly enforced — might flood the child-protection system with baseless reports filed by untrained members of the public.

    "I'd be in favor of as broad a mandated reporting law as possible," said Veith. "But it needs to be accompanied by required training."

    Sociology professor David Finkelhor, director of the Crimes against Children Research Center at the University of New Hampshire, said several studies have shown that many professionals who are required to report suspected abuse — including doctors and psychologists — often decide not to report. Reasons vary, he said, including a fear that authorities would mishandle the case or a sense that the problem could be better addressed privately.

    "Prosecutions under the statutes for not reporting are unbelievably few and far between," Finkelhor said. "Maybe it's better that people use discretion ... If everybody obeyed the letter of the law and reported a suspicion of abuse, the agencies would be completely overwhelmed with reports."

    Frank Cervone of the Support Center for Child Advocates, which handles many child-welfare cases in Philadelphia, said the Pennsylvania reporting law should be changed to impose tougher penalties for failure to report.

    Under the current law, that offense is a third-degree misdemeanor, punishable by up to a year in prison. At the time Curley and Schultz are accused of failing to report, it was summary offense punishable by up to 90 days in prison and a $200 fine.

    ___(equals)

    David Crary can be reached at http://twitter.com/CraryAP

     
    • david  •  Atlantic City, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Are Yahoo employees watching porn on the company time because this story is a month old.
    • Roberta  •  Wallingford, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Mr. Crary, Unfortunately, you are making the same mistake in your opening paragraph that many in the media are making. If you read the grand jury presentment correctly, no one really knows WHAT Mike McQueary told Joe Paterno on that day in 2002. The presentment was a SUMMARY and not actual word for word testamony. You are ASSUMING as many are in the media the word "rape" was actually used. Depending on what was actually said I'm sure would cause a person to react in a very different manner. I for one am more concerned about what the police and DA did NOT do in 1998 (including the current governer of Pennsyvania who was the Attorney General at the time). I say we worry more about the victims and less about Joe Paterno and let the law takes its course. And lets all remember, the actual TRIAL has not happened yet....maybe we should all wait till then to judge the actions of others.
    • Iluvsnoopy  •  Irvine, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Sadly, I see both sides of this argument. Mandated reporters should report directly to the police to avoid the type of cover up at Penn State. Neverthless, investigations should not always assume the accused is guilty. I have a relative who lost his teaching position as a result of a false accusation. Even after the person who made the accusation recanted, the school still ousted my relative. He had no prior record of misconduct, rather he had an exemplary record. None of it mattered. Family members tried to get him to go ahead and sue the school. He is also a pastor and believed suing is not Christian behavior. All parties need appropriate protections to ensure reports are filed but also that investigations don't presume guilt.
    • rippie dave  •  Woburn, United States  •  6 mths ago
      when you see a ten year old boy being boned by a 50 year old guy, you call the cops. pretty simple. definitely a problem if anyone cannot see that, and not doing so should be considered concealment of and conspiracy to conceal a sex crime against a minor under 14 after the fact. that should erase any doubt about what to do.
      • John 6 mths ago
        call the cops after smashing the guy's head into the shower wall a dozen or so times
      • rippie dave 6 mths ago
        violence isn't necessarily the answer, but calling the cops is the LEAST that should have been done. i'm pretty sure that use of deadly force is considered reasonable to stop rape... not that i'm suggesting that, but i wouldn't rush to get in the way, either.

        this may be, and should likely be, the end of the football program for Penn State and certainly the death knell for unsupervised organizations like this one tailor made to feed a predator. i hope there are some long, horrible prison sentences as a result of all this.
    • DK  •  St. Louis, United States  •  6 mths ago
      I used to work for a university in StL, Mo and as part of my job I verified the destruction of data on school computers. The policy was that if any illegal data, images, video etc. was found on the drives I had to inform a specific list of officials and nothing else. If I had however personally witnessed abuse of a minor by someone on or off campus I would have interceded to protect the minor and notify the authorities. I don't understand why they fired JP, he didn't witness the activity, it was hearsay to him, and he followed their policy. The person who witnessed it should be in trouble for not protecting the child when he witnessed it.
    • TypeA  •  6 mths ago
      Why has NO body Called Out Sandusky?
      • FormerRepublican 6 mths ago
        Last I saw him, he was in handcuffs. He is going to trial and he is going to prison. We just want to make sure all the others who allowed his criminal acts will be joining him.
      • Galileo was right! 6 mths ago
        Yes, I agree with Rambler, and hopefully somebody will give Sandusky a "bubba" for a cell mate that pays no attention to satisfying Mr. Sandusky's needs, but makes Sandusky his bitch every day in every way until his assho!e is raw.
      • VincentA 6 mths ago
        Yeah, typea...Sandusky is in jail...the others, and JoePa is only most high profile, hence gets the most coverage, would get away with TURNING THEIR BACKS ON CHILD MOLESTATION IN THEIR MIDST. There is outrage by all od us parents and other champions for kids because EDUCATORS are supposed to care about their kids FIRST.
        See football 'heroes' aren't the real heroes. The real heroes are the ones who risk their jobs and reputations standing up to these Good Old Boy Clubs to scream for the right thing to be done, and for once, it has nothing to do with politics...
    • KenM  •  Sunnyvale, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Why didn't the guy that observed this crime in progress not intervene ? Even if it meant getting beat-up he should have attacked the pervert to protect the child.
      • MARY 6 mths ago
        I'd like to know that too! And he still has a job on the coaching staff??? WHY???
      • TomP 6 mths ago
        He's being called a hero by FOX news and the right wing media
      • A Yahoo! User 6 mths ago
        yes look at what happened nothing beaten up? he probably would have been killed by these Penn staters
    • Cheryl  •  Greenville, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Doesn't the guy who was the eyewitness to the event have a duty to intervene or at the very least report this to the police asap. Calling your daddy doesn't cut it in my book.
      • Buck 6 mths ago
        why it doesnt make sense...and 10 yrs later??? and it took the grand jury more than a year???? there is obviously a lot of missing info here....why jumping on people without all the information is ignorant...
      • Ian 6 mths ago
        McQueary probably told his dad nonchalantly in passing, "you will never guess what I saw" and left it at that.
    • clint  •  6 mths ago
      McQuerry the coward turned his back on a child that needed his help. Sandusky should be hanging from an oak tree and everyone who knew about it and did nothing should be prosecuted and banned from being around children. If they weren't willing to come to the aid of a child they dont deserve to be in the presence of a child.
      • Sheiron 6 mths ago
        He is an opportunist. He saw himself moving into Paterno's job as king instead of Sandusky and his silence bought him the job. Paterno was more powerful than the governor and orchestrated the entire cover-up to keep his "success with honor" facade intact.
      • Laurel G 6 mths ago
        that s flippin sad!
    • I said It  •  6 mths ago
      This Exit: Penn State. Next Exit: State Pen.
    • Joanna  •  Fremont, United States  •  6 mths ago
      It's time people start acting mature and stop abusing our most vulnerable group of the population.
    • Randy  •  6 mths ago
      It shouldn't take a law to do the right thing to protect kids. That, in itself, is troubling.
    • Todd M  •  6 mths ago
      Regardless of the law, why didn't McQueary break Sandusky's skull open when he witnessed him raping a child? There is no one else to blame but him. He was the eye witness and turned his back and walked away. #$%$
    • Peter  •  6 mths ago
      You can't defend any of these guys. I don't care who saw it. Somebody had to take it to the police. Plain and simple..a kid that hasn't even hit puberty naked in a shower with an almost 60 year old man. Of course we know the allegation is much worse than that. They allowed this monster to roam around their University. The blood is on all of their hands that were in position to report this disgusting pedophile.
    • richard  •  6 mths ago
      What good is having the Texas Legislature or the National Congress in D.C. create new laws if they will not allow the laws of our countrry to be enofrced. Hundreds of thousands dollars are wasted each and every year that our Congressmen spend in committees, on hours of discussion and debate, but it all becomes waste when the bills that they pass are not enforced. That is the problem with this government which we have in D.C. now. Enforcement, people, that is what we need. And we need it now!
    • Southern Belle  •  Vallejo, United States  •  6 mths ago
      McQueary should have been calling the police to turn himself in after he kicked #$%$ out of Sandusky. Regardless of the legal requirements, as responsible adults, we have a moral obligation to protect our children. In this case, greed and status overruled common decency. We have lost our moral compass when a money generating project is more important than keeping our children safe from preators like Sandusky. Throw the entire crew in prison and house them in general population. Convicts will let them know how those poor little boys endured.
    • Observer  •  Middletown, United States  •  6 mths ago
      this is the part I don't get - your friend is caught acting out as a pedophile - at very least you are no longer friends or associates - that means they are no longer welcome in your place of work - what did he say when he saw him over the next 7 years - are you enjoying access to young men, how is that childrens not for profit you run, come on over for dinner - come on he could clearly see that there had been no follow up and don't tell me he forgot - you forget to buy your wife a b-day gift not the fact that a close associate of several decades is a pedophile...
    • P L  •  Lincolnshire, United States  •  6 mths ago
      I think that McQueary should be fired too. If Coach Joe Paterno (according to state law) did what he was supposed to do and got fired, then McQueary should not be on the sidelines for any future games (afterall, he is the one who witnessed it)!
    • straitfax  •  6 mths ago
      Maybe when Joe Pa's assistant, McQueery, saw a boy being molested, he just turned away. Sorta like the major networks' " If you don't like it, then change the channel" mentality.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  6 mths ago
      This case has just started. Wait till the incidents at the 2nd Mile become known. Then we have the 13 year investigation by local and State Police and AG'S including the current Governor Tom Corbett. TOM: Why did you set on the Sandusky Case for 3 years.
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