Gerald Arthur Sandusky (born January 26, 1944) is an American convicted rapist, a child molester and retired college football coach. Sandusky served as an assistant coach for his entire career, mostly at Pennsylvania State University under Joe Paterno, from 1969 to 1999. He received the "Assistant Coach of the Year" award in 1986 and 1999. Sandusky wrote several books relating to soccer coaching experience ball.
In 1977, Sandusky founded The Second Mile, a non-profit charity that serves disadvantaged and risky Pennsylvania teenagers. After retiring 1999 Sandusky as an assistant coach at Penn State, he continues to work with The Second Mile at Penn State, maintaining an office at the university until 2011.
In 2011, after a two-year grand jury investigation, Sandusky was arrested and charged with 52 allegations of sexual harassment of young boys over a 15-year period from 1994 to 2009. He met his victims of persecution through The Second Mile; they participate in the organization. Some of them testified against Sandusky in his sexual harassment hearing. Four of the charges were then dropped. On June 22, 2012, Sandusky was found guilty of 45 of the 48 remaining counts. Sandusky was sentenced on October 9, 2012, to 30 to 60 years in prison - at his age, effectively a life sentence. On October 18, 2012, Sandusky's lawyer appealed his conviction at the County Courthouse Court in Pennsylvania. They claim that they do not have enough time to prepare their clients' cases. On October 31, 2012, Sandusky was transferred to SCI Greene's "supermax" prison in Pennsylvania to serve his sentence. On January 30, 2013, Pennsylvania Judge John Cleland rejected Sandusky's request for a new trial.
Video Jerry Sandusky
Early life and family
Sandusky was born in Washington, Pennsylvania in 1944, the only son of Evelyn Mae (nÃÆ' à © e Lee), an Irish Catholic housewife from a small Pennsylvania coal mining town, and Arthur Sandusky, whose parents, Edward and Josephine Sendecki, is a Polish immigrant, who moved to East Vandergrift, Pennsylvania. His father, Arthur, has served in the youth service program for over 30 years, mostly as director of the Brownson House in Washington, Pennsylvania, a community recreation center for children. There he founded the Junior Wrestling Pennsylvania program and created a junior basketball, volleyball, boxing and soccer ball program for Brownson House. He improved the facilities there by adding new playgrounds, gyms, outdoor basketball courts and a renovated football field. He manages the 1955 Washington baseball team that won the Pony League World Series championship, the only team from Washington to win the championship. Arthur was inducted into the Hall of Fame of Pennsylvania Sports in 1989.
At home, Jerry Sandusky adopted his own personal law called "Jer's Law" which he maintained for many years. The rule adopted is that Sandusky can be naughty but not to the point where one can be intentionally injured; he also vowed to disrespect his teacher and swore to himself that he would tell the truth if he was caught violating any rules. Sandusky was a fan of the 1994 film Forrest Gump, telling one of the victims he identified with the main character. Sandusky signed at least one letter to his victim as "Forrest Jer."
Sandusky attended Washington High School, where he was a good student and a prominent athlete, playing baseball, basketball, and soccer. He is a leader in his junior high school basketball team that is unbeaten through the Western Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic League playoffs in his final season there. His classmates describe him as a diligent "loner", "never dating in high school", but a popular and handsome athlete.
Sandusky married Dorothy "Dottie" ( nÃÆ' à © e Gross) in 1966, and together they had six adopted children. Sandusky and his wife have also served as foster parents. One of Sandusky's sons, Jon Sandusky, is the Director of Personnel Players for Cleveland Browns from 2010 to 2014. Another boy, E. J. Sandusky, is an assistant football coach at West Chester University. Sandusky describes his family as "old-fashioned" with Dottie becoming a leader.
Matt Sandusky, adopted son and former Sandusky adopted son, released a statement through his lawyer saying that Sandusky had sexually abused him as a child. Matt Sandusky's remarks were released on the jury's day of consideration in a sexual harassment trial against Sandusky.
On 13 February 2017, Sandusky's son Jeffrey (Jeff) was arrested and accused of sexually assaulting a child and child pornography, and filed a temporary defense awaiting trial in September 2017, with a sentence scheduled for December 2017. He was sentenced on 8 December 2017 from three and a half to six years in prison after "pleading guilty for pressuring a teenage girl to send her naked photographs and asking a teenage sister to have sex."
Jerry Sandusky is a member of St. Methodist Church. Paul in State College.
Maps Jerry Sandusky
Education and soccer career
Sandusky played for Rip Engle at Penn State, starting at the defensive end from 1963 to 1965. He graduated first in his class with B.S. in health in 1966 and physical education in 1970.
Initial training career
Sandusky served as a graduate assistant under Paterno at Penn State in 1966. He was an assistant basketball coach and track at Juniata College in 1967 and an offensive line coach at Boston University in 1968.
Train careers at Penn State
He returned to Penn State in 1969 and remained there as an assistant coach until his retirement at the end of the 1999 season. Sandusky served as defense coach in 1969, became midfielder coach in 1970, and promoted to defensive coordinator in 1977, that was until his retirement. In years as a midfield coach and defensive coordinator, he trained many defenders, and Penn State earned a reputation for extraordinary linebacker, earning the first 10 All-American teams in that position, earning the nickname "Linebacker U". Jack Ham and LaVar Arrington are two of the greats of famous football that emerged from his team.
After retirement, Sandusky was awarded "both an unusual compensation package and a special appointment of 'emeritus' ratings which carries privileges, including access to university recreation facilities." Spanier approved a lump-sum payment to Sandusky for $ 168,000. The coaching of his last game at Penn State was an important game for Sandusky. Penn State faces Texas A & amp; M at Alamo Bowl 1999 in San Antonio, Texas. Nittany Lions' defense closes Texas A & amp; M, 24-0, the only victory in a bowl game for Penn State under Paterno. Sandusky is known in the way usually reserved for head coaches. He was doused with a bucket of water and brought to the middle of the field on the shoulders of his players.
The Second Mile
After his retirement, Sandusky hosted many summer soccer camps and was active in The Second Mile, a children's charity he founded in State College, Pennsylvania in 1977.
President George H. W. Bush praised the group as a "glorious example" of charity work in the 1990 letter, one of the "Thousands of light dots" promoted by the president to volunteer community organizations.
Citing the work of Sandusky with The Second Mile charity to provide care for foster children, the US Senator Rick Santorum honors Sandusky with the Angels in Adoption award in 2002. On November 15, 2011, the Congressional Coalition at Adoption Institute, a nonprofit adoption awareness organization, his appreciation for the Angels in Adoption 2002 award to Jerry and Dorothy Sandusky. Santorum, then run for Republican nomination for President, said he was "devastated" by the scandal.
Former Eagles head coach Dick Vermeil and Andy Reid, former Phillies Ruly Carpenter, Matt Millen of ESPN, actors Mark Wahlberg, Arnold Palmer and football player Franco Harris, among others, served on the Second Mile Honorary Board.
During the time period that Sandusky is being investigated by the Office of the Attorney General, investigators are serving a subpoena on Second Mile to obtain records of boys who have been through Sandusky's travel and expense programs. Apparently, the records from 2000 to 2003 are gone. The record keepers then found the file for a year, but records for the other three years were never found.
Child sex abuse scandal
Investigations and charges
The investigation was initiated by the Pennsylvania prosecutor's office into allegations of sexual harassment against Sandusky in 2008. The allegations were initiated at Central Mountain High School, where a student made allegations of abuse against Sandusky. The investigation reached a new level of urgency when it became clear that the allegations were not a series of isolated incidents, but Sandusky had a strategy to abuse vulnerable children. Through the Second Mile organization, Sandusky will first approach potential victims, usually boys without fathers who stay at home, when they are 8-12 years old. Furthermore, Sandusky uses classic child-care strategies such as offering a trip to a soccer match or conferring a gift, which will lead to additional touches. This form of manipulation is generally a modus operandi of pedophiles as a way to build trust when attacking personal boundaries - all part of instilling confusion, leading to and part of sexual harassment. Finally, Sandusky often started outright sexual behavior in the bathroom. "The testimony of a victim, who said he was forced to put his hand on Sandusky's erection when he was 8 to 10 years old, especially angry researchers." The poor child is too young to understand what an erection is, "someone said.
On November 4, 2011, a grand jury that was held in September 2009, or earlier, sued Sandusky for 40 alleged sex crimes against young boys. The indictment came after a three-year investigation investigating Sandusky's allegations of inappropriate contact with a minor for four years, beginning when the boy was ten years old. The child's parents reported the incident to the police in 2009. The grand jury identified eight boys who had been selected for sexual advancement or sexual assault by Sandusky, which lasted from 1994 to 2009. At least 20 of the incidents allegedly occurred when Sandusky was still working at Penn State.
According to the first indictment, in 2002 assistant coach Mike McQueary, then a Penn State graduate assistant, said he went to Sandusky and raped a ten-year-old boy. The next day, McQueary reported the incident to head coach Joe Paterno. (Later when testifying during the Sandusky trial, McQueary talked about what he told Paterno: "I told him and I wanted to make sure I was clear I made sure he knew it was sexual and wrong No doubt.") Paterno told McQueary at the time "In the early hearing for Tim Curley and Gary Schultz, McQueary testified that Paterno was" shocked and sad, somewhat slumped back in his chair. " He says that Paterno told him: "I'm sorry, you have to see it. It's horrible." And he said, 'I have to think and tell some people what you see and I'll tell you what... what we'll do next.' "Paterno later told Penn State athletics director Tim Curley.In Early Hearing, McQueary also testified that he" believed "Sandusky was" doing some kind of relationship "with the boy, saying that it was based on Sandusky's" positions "and boys , but he never sees "insertion" or "penetration" and is not "100 percent sure" that the relationship takes place.
Curley and senior vice president for finance and business Gary Schultz (who oversaw the Penn State state police department) called McQueary to a meeting a week and a half later. In McQueary's testimony he stated that during the meeting he delivered what "graphic detail" he had witnessed in the locker bathroom at the Lasch House. At Curley's Early Hearings and Schultz, McQueary testified that he would give Curley and Schultz a "rough idea" of bodily positions in the bathroom, and would describe the activity as "very sexual and I think some kind of intercourse is going on."
The charges accuse Curley and Schultz of not only failing to notify the police, but also by telling the grand jury that McQueary never told them about alleged sexual activity.
On November 5, 2011, Sandusky was arrested and charged with seven alienated allegations of unintended sexual intercourse, eight allegations of child-dirt corruption, eight counts of endangering the welfare of a child, seven allegations of indecent attacks, and other violations.
Prosecutors charged Curley and Schultz with false oaths and failed to report allegations of child abuse by Sandusky.
On 6 November 2011, Penn State banned Sandusky from campus. The guarantee conditions do not include travel restrictions.
In December 2011, Sandusky was charged with 12 additional sexual crimes against children. The appearance of the two grand jurors charged Sandusky with an additional amount of deviant sexual intercourse and two additional amounts of unlawful contact with minors. Additional victims, known only as "Victim 9" and "Victim 10," are participants in the Sandusky youth program and are between the ages of 10 and 12 at the time of the sexual assault.
On December 7, 2011, Sandusky was arrested for the second time on the allegation of additional sexual harassment. Sandusky was released on bail of $ 250,000 and placed on house arrest being monitored while he was awaiting trial. Sandusky chose to rule out his preliminary hearing in mid-December.
Pre-test interview
On November 14, in a television telephone interview on NBC's Rock Center with Brian Williams, Sandusky confessed to correspondent Bob Costas to bathe with underage boys and touch their bodies, as he described "without contact sexual intentions. " Sandusky denied being a pedophile. The interview received substantial coverage in the media, especially on how Sandusky answered Costas when asked if he was sexually attracted to boys:
COSTAS: "Are you sexually attracted to boys, to underage boys?"
SANDUSKY: "Am I sexually attracted to underage boys?"
COSTS: "Already."
SANDUSKY: "Sexually attracted, you know, I enjoy young people, I love to be around them, but no, I'm not sexually attracted to boys."
In the days after the interview, some potential victims contacted State College lawyer Andy Shubin to tell their stories, with one claim Sandusky had tortured him in the 1970s.
In an interview with Jo Becker of The New York Times on December 3, 2011, Sandusky responded to 40 early indictment of child sexual abuse:
BECKER: "You must have some theory, without going into individual cases or naming names."
SANDUSKY: "You have to, to have my understanding of it.What am I thinking? I mean, what I'm thinking is that this is an individual problem.These kids, some of them, I know them.Some of them. no "I know them all. [Amendola's lawyer interrupts 'we assume']. We assume we know it. Two of the children. My feeling is that they're pulled in here. "
Trial
The court, for 52 counts of sexual offenses against children, commenced on June 11, 2012, at the County Courthouse Center in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania. State Deputy Attorney General and former Joseph E. McGettigan III assassin, leading the prosecution team to the Commonwealth; defense lawyer Joseph Amendola is Sandusky's chief lawyer for the defense team; and Senior Judge John Cleland leads.
During the eight-day trial, the jurors heard from eight witnesses who testified that Sandusky sexually harassed them. The jury also heard testimony about the attack on two other victims who had never been identified. Of the eight men who gave testimony, each explained that they met Sandusky through The Second Mile organization; Their individual accounts stretched from the mid-1990s to 2009. Witnesses testified about similar stories being abused in the football locker bathroom or in the basement of Sandusky's home.
The first prosecution witness, identified in the media report as "Victim 4," described a detailed account of many instances of sexual harassment, including unwanted oral and anal sex, by Sandusky while the witness was a participant in the charity organization Secondus Sandusky. According to "Victim 4," she was sexually abused by Sandusky three times a week for three years, beginning when she was 13 years old. The witness further testified that when he tried to distance himself from Sandusky, Sandusky offered him the contract of money to continue spending time with him.
On the second day of the trial, "Victim 1", the youngest of the alleged victims of Sandusky, testified to over 20 incidents of harassment, including unwanted and forced oral sex, by Sandusky during 2007 and 2008 while the boy became a participant in Second Mile Sandusky program. The boy is 11 or 12 years old when sexual harassment begins. Mike McQueary, former assistant football coach Penn State, testified that in 2001 in Penn State locker room, he heard the sound of "skin on skin" slapping from the bathroom. McQueary testified that he later saw Sandusky naked behind a 10- to 12-year-old boy propped against a bathroom wall, with "Sandusky's arm wrapped around the boy's middle in the nearest distance I think you can get in."
Defense lawyers Sandusky argue that the accusers are driven by financial motives. The defense also shows some of the accusers have changed their story and that some of them continue the relationship with Sandusky after alleged harassment (one goes to a football game with Sandusky shortly before his arrest, others bring his girlfriend to meet Sandusky). The psychiatrist who testifies to his defender. Eliot Atkins, diagnose Sandusky with a histrionic personality disorder, a disorder characterized by attention-seeking behavior and excessive emotion. Dr. Atkins testified that the letters Sandusky wrote to the accusers were consistent with this disorder, rather than the "caring" behavior as alleged by the prosecutor.
On June 18, 2012, it was reported that during a day-long full-time trial last Friday, prosecutors had contacted NBC "requesting the network to reauthenticate the transcript without full editing" from interview Bob Costas from November. The inseparable part of Costas's interview featured Sandusky saying, "I do not go around looking for any young person for my sexual needs." The legal analyst explains that this can be used by the prosecutor to re-examine Sandusky if he will take a position.
On June 21, 2012, after the case was filed on the jury, Matt Sandusky, one of six adopted children of Sandusky, declared through his lawyer that he was also the victim of the former coach's sexual abuse. He was ready to testify for prosecution, but did not do it. Later, Amendola said that Jerry Sandusky had every intention to testify in his own defense, but decided against it because he claimed that the prosecutor would call Matt Sandusky to the witness stand.
Furthermore, sources close to investigations conducted by the State Attorney General's Office have stated that prosecutors have never threatened to have Matt Sandusky testify in court, and that "prosecutor Joseph McGettigan enjoys the opportunity of taking over Jerry Sandusky in cross-examination and has promised at Amendola from the beginning that they will not call any additional refutation witnesses ".
Verdict and punishment
The jury, which consists of seven women and five men, many have direct links with Penn State, which is discussed for 21 hours over two days. On the night of June 22, 2012, the jury reached its verdict, finding Sandusky guilty of 45 of 48 charges against him. Specifically, Sandusky was convicted of the following charges and counts: eight allegations of deviation from unintended sexual intercourse, seven counts of indecent assault, one alleged crime for indecent assault, nine allegations of illegal contact with minors, 10 counts of corruption minors and 10 counts endangering the welfare of children. Cleland immediately revoked Sandusky's guarantee and returned it to the Center County Correctional Facility to await the sentence.
Sandusky faces a maximum sentence of 442 years in prison. According to NBC News' Michael Isikoff, Sandusky faces a minimum sentence of 60 years under Pennsylvania's penal code - at his age, effectively a life sentence. The verdict is estimated 90 days from the date of the guilty verdict. On September 17, it was announced that Sandusky would be sentenced on October 9.
On the night before his conviction, Sandusky released an audio statement preserving his innocence. The next day, Cleland sentenced Sandusky to 60 years in prison. He will not qualify for parole until he has served at least 30 years. The earliest release date is probably October 9, 2042; when he will be 98 years old - all but assured he will die in prison. In saying the sentence, Cleland said that Sandusky is a very dangerous kind of child molester because he covers his manipulation and abuse of children behind a respectable facade. "This is an amazing ability to hide that makes this crime so vile," he said. While acknowledging Sandusky's "positive work", Cleland calls him a "dangerous" child molester who should never be allowed to be free again. At the same hearing, Cleland granted the prosecutor's request that Sandusky declare "a predator of sexual violence" under Pennsylvania's Megan law. This will subject him to strict reporting requirements if he is released. Sandusky not only had to report his address to the police every three months for the rest of his life, but also had to participate in a court-approved counseling program. However, this appointment is likely to become academic because as mentioned above, Sandusky will almost certainly die in prison. Earlier, on August 30, the Pennsylvania Institute of Sexual Breeding Assessment has recommended Sandusky to be declared a predator with sexual violence.
Sandusky also has the potential to face federal charges for molesting boys in the 1999 Outback Bowl in Tampa and his last game as college coach, Alamo Bowl 1999 in San Antonio. Although this is spelled out in state indictments, federal authorities have jurisdiction over crimes that cross national borders. Although federal investigators seem to be focusing their investigation on the possibility of covering up Sandusky crime by officials at Penn State, it would not be a double danger to file a lawsuit against Sandusky himself. Officials in San Antonio are investigating the 1999 Alamo Bowl case, and Sandusky has the potential to face charges there; again, it would not be a double danger for him to be prosecuted in Texas.
Reactions
Penn State became the subject of significant media criticism because some of its staff members, from University Presidents to graduate assistants, covered the Sandusky attack. Maureen Dowd writes about the scandal: "Like the hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church, Penn State's hierarchy seems to have masked the crime of pedophilia to protect its brand."
In June 2012, Penn State University implemented a policy to require the reporting of child abuse by Penn State employees working with children. The policy also requires all Penn State employees to work with children to undergo background checks and training related to child abuse and reporting requirements.
Freeh Report
The Penn State State Advisory Council assigned a report by a special investigative group headed by former FBI director Louis Freeh. After interviewing more than 400 people and reviewing over 3.5 million documents, the core of the report's findings, released July 12, 2012, states:
Taking into account witness statements and available evidence, the Special Investigation Adviser found that it made more sense to conclude that, in order to avoid the consequences of bad publicity, the most powerful leaders at the University - Spanier, Schultz, Paterno and Curley - repeatedly hide critical facts which deals with Sandusky child abuse from the authorities, the University Supervisory Board, the Penn State community, and the wider community.
The Freeh report states that although "avoidance of bad publicity consequences" is a major cause of failure in protecting child abuse victims and reporting to the authorities, the report also outlines other causes, including: "The lack of conspicuous empathy for child abuse victims by most leaders senior from the University "; failure of supervision by the Supervisory Board; a President of the University "discouraged discussions and dissent"; "lack of awareness of child abuse issues"; and "a culture of respect for an ingrained soccer program at all levels of the campus community".
The report describes how the four men learned of the 1998 harassment in the locker bathroom, and had followed the investigation at the time. Freeh's investigation found a file saved by Schultz in which he wrote a note about the 1998 incident of Sandusky. For example, Schultz writes: "Does this open the Pandora's box?" He also wonders, "the other kids?" Freeh states that Schultz has "actively sought to conceal the records".
The evidence of Freeh's proof report relies heavily on emails extracted from 1998 and 2001, referred to by Freeh as "the most important evidence" in the report. The report confirms that these emails indicate that in 1998 Paterno knew about the Sandusky investigation, and followed it closely; and pointed out that it was Paterno, "long considered the most powerful official at the university," who persuaded Spanier, Curley, and Schultz to not officially report Sandusky to law enforcement or child welfare officials. According to The New York Times, the university's handling of Sandusky's 2001 report that raped a boy was "one of the most damning episodes organized by Mr. Inquiry." Freeh... â â¬
The report states that no one takes "responsible action after February 2001 other than Curley informs Second Mile that Mr. Sandusky has taken a bath with a child" and then tells Sandusky not to take his "guest" to Penn State's facility; but the topic of sexual harassment is not alluded to by Sandusky.
The report criticized Paterno for his failure to "warn the entire soccer staff, to prevent Sandusky from bringing another child to the Lasch Building."
According to the details in the report, despite realizing Sandusky's sexual mistakes with young boys in the locker bathrooms at the Lasch House in 1998 and 2001, Spanier, Paterno, Curley, and Schultz never restricted Sandusky's access to Penn State's facilities. The report stated that Sandusky had access to the Lasch House until November 2011. Over the next ten years, Sandusky "often at the Lasch Works Building, appeared on Penn State-supported campus events... He was bathing with young boys, living in a dormitory... There are more red flags than you can count, over long periods of time. "As a result, of the 10 young boys Sandusky will be punished for sexual assault, most of them were tortured after he was investigated in 1998 - at least five of them were attacked "at the Penn State football facility and other places on campus after May 1998". After retiring in 1999, the report notes that Sandusky continues to have "unlimited and unattended access to University facilities and affiliations with leading university football programs." Indeed, continuous access gives Sandusky a currency that allows him to withdraw his victims. "
Beyond the issue of building access, the report details that as part of Sandusky's retirement agreement he can "continue working with young people through Penn State" for over a decade, including Second Mile events on campus, youth soccer camps, etc..
At a July 12 press conference announcing the report's findings, Freeh stated in his prepared remarks: "The most powerful people at Penn State have failed to take any steps for 14 years to protect the victims of Sandusky's children." He said they "never showed, through actions or words, concern for the safety and welfare of Sandusky victims" until after he was arrested in 2011.
Further allegations and investigations
Three men advanced and told police that they were tortured in the 1970s or 1980s by Sandusky. They were the first to accuse abuse before the 1990s. CBS News also reported that the US Postal Service led an investigation to see if Sandusky sent child pornography through cross-state mail. According to one source, child pornography is found on at least one Sandusky computer. Other reports indicate that people have claimed that Sandusky had attacked them during the 1960s, when he lived at Brownson House in Washington, Pennsylvania.
On August 24, 2012, as reported by the Associated Press, the individual known as "Victim 1" who testified at Sandusky Court brought a lawsuit against Pennsylvania State University. They reported that the lawsuit accused the University's behavior of complaining that Sandusky had acted against boys with sexual inequality was "intentional and embarrassing", saying that Penn State was involved in "deliberate, intentional and disgraceful subordination of children's safety to economic interests, and for its sake in maintaining and perpetuating its reputation. "
In September 2012, former Philadelphia child prostitute Greg Bucceroni charged that Philadelphia philanthropist in 1979 and 1980, Ed Savitz, took him from his New Jersey residence to a State College Second Mile fundraiser for the purpose of child trafficking.
Prison
On October 23, 2012, Sandusky was transferred to Camp Hill state prison in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania for a pre-prison evaluation. He was later transferred to the state prison Greene in Franklin Township, where most of the country's life and inmates were placed, on October 31, 2012, to serve his sentence. He was placed in a protective custody.
On December 3, 2014, KDKA-TV in Pittsburgh reported that Sandusky received a letter from Penn State asking to renew his season ticket plan for the football team and attend a "recruiting" trip to Penn State basketball. The letter was reportedly sent in error.
Sandusky was transferred to Somerset state prison, a medium security jail outside Somerset, Pennsylvania, in March 2017.
Sandusky has tried to get a new test. Psychologist Elisabeth Loftus will testify in her defense as a depressed memory specialist, as many of the victims' testimonies to Sandusky are based on repressed memories.
Publications and interviews
Sandusky wrote an autobiography titled Touched: The Story of Jerry Sandusky (ISBN 9781582612706), published in 2001. His coauthor is Keith "Kip" Richeal. The book also includes a quote in the foreword from football coach Dick Vermeil on Sandusky: "He can very much be Will Rogers from the coaching profession."
Other books by Sandusky include:
- Developing linebackers by Penn State , Leisure Press, 1981; ISBN 978-0-918438-64-5
- Trainer linebacker , with Cedric X. Bryant. Coaches Choice Books, 1995; ISBN 978-1-57167-059-5
- 101 linebacker linebackers , with Cedric X. Bryant. Coaches Choice Books, 1997; ISBN: 978-1-57167-087-8
Sandusky gave his first television interview since his conviction at the NBC Today show on March 25, 2013.
References
External links
- Sandusky, timeline of Penn State case
- "Jerry Sandusky collects news and comments". The New York Times .
- Works by or about Jerry Sandusky in the library (WorldCat catalog)
- Grand jury indictment (Archive)
Source of the article : Wikipedia