Tuesday, January 21, 2025
8.0°F

Prosecutors ask judge to order Graham Spanier report to jail

Mark Scolforo | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 years AGO
by Mark Scolforo
| January 13, 2021 11:15 AM

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Pennsylvania prosecutors want a judge to order former Penn State president Graham Spanier to begin serving a county jail sentence for endangering children by the way he responded to a complaint that Jerry Sandusky had attacked a boy on campus.

The attorney general's office wrote in a Monday letter to Judge John Boccabella that no legal impediment prevents him from enforcing the minimum sentence of two months in jail, followed by two months of house arrest.

Senior Deputy Attorney General Patrick Schulte told the judge he would support allowing Spanier work release with medical furloughs, and suggested the judge could order Spanier to report at some future date to lower the risk of COVID-19 exposure.

Spanier, 72, was convicted by a jury of misdemeanor child endangerment for his handling of a report that Sandusky, a former football team assistant coach, had attacked a boy in a team shower.

The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last month overturned a federal magistrate judge's decision to vacate Spanier’s conviction.

Sam Silver, Spanier's defense attorney, on Friday asked Boccabella to revise the sentence to house arrest with electronic monitoring. Spanier had heart surgery in 2019 and suffers from an advanced stage of prostate cancer, Silver wrote.

Silver said in an email to The Associated Press on Wednesday that Spanier is a first-time, nonviolent offender and called it astonishing that prosecutors want to send him to jail at this time.

“It’s simply absurd and irresponsible right now,” Silver said.

Spanier was forced out as university president shortly after Sandusky was arrested in 2011 on child molestation charges. A year later, Spanier was himself accused of a criminal cover-up, although many of those counts were later thrown out. A jury acquitted him of what remained, except for the single count of child endangerment.

A graduate assistant told Spanier’s top aides he saw Sandusky abusing a boy late on a Friday night in a team shower. Spanier has said the abuse of the boy, who has not been conclusively identified by authorities, was characterized as horseplay.

When those aides proposed not reporting the matter to police, Spanier approved, writing in an email that “the only downside for us is if the message isn’t ‘heard’ and acted upon, and we then become vulnerable for not having reported it.”

Spanier did not testify at his trial and told the judge at sentencing that he regretted not intervening more forcefully.

Sandusky has lost a string of appeals and is serving a lengthy state prison sentence.

MORE IMPORTED STORIES

Ex-Penn St. president's Sandusky-related conviction restored
Columbia Basin Herald | Updated 4 years, 1 month ago
Penn State ex-president argues conviction properly tossed
Columbia Basin Herald | Updated 4 years, 7 months ago
Penn State settles 'outstanding issues' with Paterno family
Columbia Basin Herald | Updated 4 years, 11 months ago

ARTICLES BY MARK SCOLFORO

September 15, 2021 12:03 a.m.

Free rides take $104M toll on Pennsylvania Turnpike finances

CARLISLE, Pa. (AP) — More than $104 million in Pennsylvania Turnpike tolls went uncollected last year as the agency fully converted to all-electronic tolling, with the millions of motorists who don't use E-ZPass having a nearly 1 in 2 chance of riding without paying under the “toll-by-plate” license plate camera system.

September 14, 2021 7:33 a.m.

Free rides take $104M toll on Pennsylvania Turnpike finances

CARLISLE, Pa. (AP) — More than $104 million in Pennsylvania Turnpike tolls went uncollected last year as the agency fully converted to all-electronic tolling, with the millions of motorists who don't use E-ZPass having a nearly 1 in 2 chance of riding without paying under the “toll-by-plate” license plate camera system.

May 16, 2021 12:03 a.m.

Philly health official forced to resign over MOVE cremations

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Philadelphia's top health official was compelled to resign Thursday after the city's mayor learned partial human remains from the 1985 bombing of the headquarters of a Black organization had been cremated and disposed of without notifying family members.