BlueSmoke said:
Deputy Travis Junior said:
SinKiller said:
rbcs_2 said:
Doesn't Joe PA being railroaded indicate he was coerced? He never admitted to any wrongdoing as far as I recall. Maybe my understanding of that term is incorrect.
The whole thing is a mess...all the way down to the fact that the "victim" has said repeatedly that nothing untoward ever happened. You just never hear that. The whole investigative journalism aspect started when an Ohio State grad, who obviously has no love for PSU, just started noticing things just didn't add up. I was like everyone else I suppose, then I listened to it.
Sandusky is doing 30 years in jail for 52 counts over 15 years and you think nothing untoward ever happened and that Paterno never knew anything despite being tipped off at least once?
I bet you believed in Q, huh?
He can be the first coach to operate via zoom on gameday
"AJ Dillen is a former Second Mile kid who saw Jerry Sandusky as a benign father figure. He didn't believe the "victim's" claims of abuse and decided to find out how the system worked for himself by becoming a fake accuser. His story unveils how easy it was to manipulate the system and collect checks from Penn State."
"As disclosed previously on Big Trial, Penn State paid out
$118 million to 36 alleged victims of abuse. They gave away the cash without checking to see whether the alleged victims had criminal records [a third of them did]. The trustees also didn't do anything to vet any of the outlandish and often contradictory tales by the claimants. None of the alleged victims were interviewed by detectives, deposed by lawyers, examined by psychiatrists, or subjected to polygraph tests.
Instead, the university's board of trustees just wrote out lottery checks that averaged more than $3 million each.
"This is someone body else's money," Nichols said, so it's "easy for them [the trustees] to pay off settlements without substantive backup because its not their money and they don't have to worry about it."
As far as the board of trustees is concerned, "it's been radio silence since then," Nichols said. "The board has taken the position to look the other way, to let sleeping dogs lie. To keep it buried, to keep it quiet and to hope that the whole unfortunate mess goes away."