Quote:
But the GA shoulders a good deal of blame as well, in my opinion, but not calling the police immediately.
This, right here, is a huge issue for me. If you
physically see someone being sexually assaulted or molested, you call the police right then and there, and if that can't be done for some reason, you pick up a 2x4 or a wrench or something and clobber the **** with it before calling the police.
The fact that he
didn't do this makes me call into question exactly what Paterno, Paterno's boss, the cops, the DA, or anyone else was eventually able to establish. I really have to question how firm the evidence against Sandusky was at the time; if I were a football coach and someone came to me and said "Hey coach, I saw coach so-and-so diddling a little kid in the shower yesterday." my first questions would be "Did you call the police?" and if not "Why the **** not?"
Most likely "why the **** not?" would, and in this case did, reveal some reason or other why it was less than entirely certain (even if highly probable) that what Sandusky was up to was actually child molestation. If it can't be established by the cops, the school, or everyone else, that he was diddling little kids, then quite frankly it's good that he wasn't simply railroaded out of his job and into jail merely on suspicion or to protect the good name of Penn State.
We don't need repeats elsewhere of RCC coverups, but we also don't need the sex-offender witch hunt that's been going on in much of the country for the last decade-plus. Trying to balance those things is tough and is going to inevitably result in mistakes being made.