heres the thing and it seems to be the most indigestable thing for staters to keep down: Joepa was in charge, and if ya'll won't face it, your just not gonna be able to get past this. folks aren't going to be misled about that fact. it may not be evident and ya'll might think you can sugarcoat it and save his reputation, but its gone with the wind.
schultz, like everyone else in happy valley who mattered looked to joe, and joe looked the other way.
imo.
This is the most popular view from the people who are looking at the university from the outside, and from a few disgruntled inside sources.
Some of the rest of us, who followed Joe Paterno's career for our entire lives, want more than the speculation of "he had to know" and "he allowed Sandusky to use the facilities", etc., before we completely undo our image of him.
For me, I can see several alternate scenarios, that just don't sound as appealing for those observers who have anointed Paterno's actions as worse than Sandusky's (and yes, I have seen that statement on WS).
1. Paterno followed protocol by reporting to his supervisors (although I would imagine he didn't even know the protocol, as child abuse requirements wouldn't likely be well-known to a coach who mostly deals with players 18 and over; he may have just wanted to put the matter in the hands of those who would know what to do).
2. The e-mails we have heard about are reported to be between Curley, Spanier and Schultz. Why would they not include Paterno? Well, for one, he seemed to be someone who didn't always toe the party line. He didn't resign quietly when they asked him in 2004, he took his own attorney to the grand jury instead of relying on Baldwin to protect his interests while she was actually representing the university. So I'm not certain the other three trusted him to go along with the "humane" solution they came up with.
3. Why didn't Paterno go to police when he realized nothing was being done? Here is another avenue that confuses me. How could he know nothing was being done? We know that the secret emails (and lawyer's statements recently) indicate that the administration claimed to have researched the matter before choosing not to report. Suppose they told Paterno that the attorneys are looking into it, and we are going to pursue whatever action they tell us is appropriate. Then Paterno doesn't see Sandusky for sometime (assuming Sandusky chose to lay low for a while), and assumes something must have been done. Why would he then go to the police, when he has been led to believe that the matter was addressed? This possibility is also led more credence in light of Paterno checking back in with McQueary, asking if he was satisfied with his meeting with Curley and Schultz.
I don't and can't know that this is absolutely what happened, but neither does anyone else know for certain that Paterno was a knowing party to the coverup. Because I have had numerous reasons to admire Paterno for many years prior to the Sandusky Scandal coming out, I choose to give him the benefit of the doubt that he acted in good faith, trusting that the men who were supposed to handle the matter actually had.
Obviously, this is not the popular view on WS or in national media outlets outside of Central PA, and if evidence emerges that demonstrates Paterno's complicity, I will hold him accountable as well. I don't see me ever holding him more accountable than the evil monster that preyed on many children for many years, but I will reconsider when that time comes. It isn't just me who wants more proof than speculation before condemning him; his players, who knew better than any of us what he stood for, have defended his reputation almost to a man.
Many will argue that the evidence won't come out to protect Paterno's legacy, but let's be honest, the BOT, Gov. Corbett, and others have had no problem allowing him to take the fall, and with him no longer being around to defend himself, I guarantee that Curley, Spanier and Schultz have no reason not to use him to deflect the blame, if such evidence exists.
Again, flame away, because I recognize that the court of public opinion has already passed judgment on Paterno's motives, and I apologize for the length of this rant, but I thought it might be interesting to hear the opposing viewpoint from someone who never mistook Joe Paterno for a saint or a god, but rather as a good man who may have made mistakes, but who generally lived his life consistently with the reputation that he had been given.