Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Wednesday, April 24, 2024 75° Today's Paper


SportsTop News

Family pushed Paterno to read Sandusky report

1/1
Swipe or click to see more
ASSOCIATED PRESS
FILE - This Oct. 8, 2011 file photo shows Penn State president Graham Spanier, left, and head football coach Joe Paterno before a college football game against Iowa in State College, Pa. Attorneys for Penn State's ousted president are planning a news conference to rebut what they view as inaccuracies in a school-sanctioned report that concluded he concealed child sex-abuse allegations. Graham Spanier's lawyer tells The Associated Press that the legal team will meet with reporters in Philadelphia early next week. Peter Vaira says there are many errors in the report by former FBI Director Louis Freeh. (AP Photo/Gene Puskar, File)

Joe Paterno had to be prodded by his family to read the grand jury report regarding Jerry Sandusky and did not understand some of its graphic terminology, according to a new book.

The book, “Paterno” by Joe Posnanski, was purchased Friday by The Associated Press in advance of its release next week.

In the book, Posnanski describes a scene at Paterno’s home, two days after Sandusky had been charged with child sex abuse last November. Paterno’s family and a close adviser were trying to explain to the Penn State coach that there was a growing sentiment Paterno must have known for years about the accusations against Sandusky.

The book quotes Paterno as shouting “I’m not omniscient!”

Paterno did not want to read the report, but family members and Penn State football communications and marketing assistant Guido D’Elia insisted that he must.

The book also indicates Paterno didn’t comprehend all the terms in the report, asking his son what sodomy meant.

According to the book, later that night Paterno’s son, Scott, told his mother that she should brace herself for the possibility that Joe could be fired.

Sue Paterno responded, “Scotty, that will kill him.”

Paterno was fired by school trustees two days later, on Nov. 9. He died in January at age 85 of cancer.

Sandusky, Paterno’s longtime defensive coordinator, is jailed and awaiting sentencing after being convicted in June on 45 criminal counts involving 10 boys.

Former Athletic director Tim Curley and now-retired school administrator Gary Schultz are awaiting trial on charges of lying to a grand jury and failing to report the abuse allegations against Sandusky.

Paterno was not charged, though the NCAA last month slammed his beloved football program with a range of tough sanctions. Among them, the Nittany Lions were forced to vacate 112 wins from 1998-2011, meaning Paterno no longer has the most coaching victories in major college football.

The penalty seemed to grow from a report commissioned by the school from former FBI director Louis Freeh. It said Paterno, Curley, Schultz and former school president Graham Spanier concealed allegations against Sandusky dating back to 1998. Paterno’s family and the three officials have all vehemently denied the conclusions.

Paterno had granted access to Posnanski to write a biography in 2011, well before Sandusky was charged.

“Nobody would argue — and certainly my book does not argue — that the good Joe Paterno did in his life should shield him from the horrors of his mistakes,” Posnanski wrote in a column for USA Today earlier this week. “Some would argue, especially in the white-hot emotion sparked by the latest revelations, that Paterno’s role in the Jerry Sandusky crimes invalidates whatever good he might have done. My book does not argue that either. My book, I believe, lets the reader make up his or her own mind.”

Comments are closed.