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I found it curious there was no mention of the report by Alycia Chambers where she said Sandusky exhibited grooming behavior.
Clemente mentioned the Chambers report and also Seasock's, which he blasted....he also said that going by Seasock's report was the reason no charges were filed.
p.15 and 16
One psychologist, trained in the art of deciphering offender behavior, Alycia Chambers,
evaluated the boy, saw and recognized all the red flags presented by Sandusky’s behavior, but
her report apparently did not receive the attention it deserved. Centre County Children and Youth Services (CYS) referred the case to counselor John Seasock,20 who, without reading Chamber’s
report, evaluated the boy for one hour and then wrote a report concluding nothing improper took
place.21 That is why no one at Penn State did anything to sanction Sandusky.* The University
Police Department, the Department of Public Welfare (DPW), and the District Attorney all
closed their cases based in large part on Seasock’s report.22
*It may be why they did nothing using this as an excuse, but I disagree that they could not do anything...as stated in the post about Clemente's report, they had every right to discuss and sanction Sandusky because he was investigated about an incident with a child that took place on the campus.
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p.61
Though Seasock’s report may have been filled with misconceptions,
mischaracterizations, and erroneous conclusions, nevertheless, it was the report that the DPW,
UPD, and the DA based their decision on to close the 1998 investigation.
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p.72
For example, although the report of counselor Seasock regarding the 1998 Sandusky
incident is methodical and thorough, it is filled with inaccurate, rigid, pigeonholed assumptions
about the behavior of “pedophiles.” Though I understand his desire to go into a potential victim
interview unbiased by the reports and conclusions of others, it is irresponsible to make any final
conclusions in such a vacuum. He had a responsibility to gather information from all available
sources and assess it before reaching his final conclusions in the case. He should have read the
transcripts of the previous interviews of the alleged victim, the Chambers report, and other police
reports to determine whether the child had been consistent in the allegations and whether
additional information had been elicited during those interviews. His inept handling of the case
and his erroneous conclusions about “pedophiles” in general, and Sandusky in particular, are a
major reason why Sandusky was not discovered as a preferential child sex offender in 1998.