STATE COLLEGE, Pa (Reuters) – Two former Penn State officials were charged yesterday with covering up alleged sexual assaults of young boys by a former coach, as authorities widely criticized the university for allowing the abuse to continue unchecked for more than a decade.
The scandal has tarnished the reputation of the university, its football programme and Joe Paterno, the revered head coach who reported the abuse up the athletic programme chain of command and is not a target of the investigation, authorities said.
Pennsylvania’s top police officer’s voice quivered when he said that in 40 years on the job he had never seen a case where someone was so clearly caught and yet not turned in to police.
“This is not a case about football, it’s not a case about universities, it’s a case about children who’ve had their innocence stolen from them and a culture that did nothing to stop it or prevent it from happening to others,” Frank Noonan said.
“What happened here was ‘grooming,’ where these predators identify a child, become mentors … then give them gifts, establish trust, initiate physical contact, which eventually leads to sexual contact,” Noonan said.
Jerry Sandusky, a former defensive coordinator on the college’s storied football team, faces charges that he abused eight boys. A grand jury’s report details his alleged sexual assaults of children as young as 10 in his home and in the team’s locker room showers.
The Sandusky case has shaken the college and its alumni, who see Paterno as a paragon of leadership for his 45 years as head coach, for winning the most games in big-time college football history and graduating players who went on to star in the National Football League.
But the charges against Athletic Director Tim Curley and finance official Gary Schultz, both of whom stepped down yesterday, are over their actions after they learned through Paterno of the alleged abuse.
Curley went on administrative leave early yesterday and Schultz returned to retirement, the university said. Later in the day, both men were formally charged and released on bail. They are due back in court late next week.
“The charges at face value are disturbing to say the least,” Harrisburg District Judge William Wenner said.