Ah details of the cover-up emerge...............................
Ex-PSU president Spanier's emails on Sandusky surface
June 12, 2012 5:59 am
Mark Stehle/Associated Press
Former Penn State University president Graham Spanier in 2003
By Moriah Balingit / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
A report Monday of email exchanges among high-ranking Penn State University officials discussing allegations of child molestation and deciding not to tell outside authorities could lead to charges against Graham Spanier, who resigned as the university's president in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky scandal.
Former FBI director Louis Freeh, whose team of investigators was tapped by a special university committee after Mr. Sandusky, a former Penn State assistant football coach, was charged with multiple counts of child sex abuse, said in a statement that he has turned the emails over to the state attorney general's office, "consistent with the investigation's prior commitment to share certain information."
Mr. Freeh's statement was issued in response to the report by NBC, citing law enforcement sources, that Mr. Spanier; Tim Curley, who is on administrative leave as Penn State's athletic director; and Gary Schultz, the former senior vice president for finance and business, exchanged emails discussing whether to tell authorities about an encounter between Mr. Sandusky and a young boy in a locker room shower witnessed by Mike McQueary, then a graduate assistant for the football team.
Previously, Mr. McQueary testified to a grand jury that he saw the boy in the shower naked with Mr. Sandusky after he went into the locker room to retrieve his shoes. Mr. McQueary testified that he believed Mr. Sandusky was molesting the boy and "having some type of sexual intercourse with him."
He said he relayed what he saw to then head coach Joe Paterno, Mr. Curley and Mr. Schultz. The two administrators then relayed the report to Mr. Spanier, who said it was described to him as "horsing around" and not something sexual.
In the exchange, NBC said the three weighed whether to tell local authorities what Mr. McQueary had said, though it's still not clear if Mr. Spanier knew the full extent of what the graduate assistant said he witnessed.
Additionally, NBC reported that internal documents reveal that legal research was done to determine whether the university officials were required to report the incident. In the end, Mr. Spanier and Mr. Schultz concluded it would be "humane" to Mr. Sandusky not to relay Mr. McQueary's report to local authorities, according to NBC.
The article goes on at..............
http://www.post-gazette.com/stories...ils-on-sandusky-surface-640008/#ixzz1xZxECvzG