By
Joe Paterno was a liar, there’s no doubt about that now. He was also a
cover-up artist. If the Freeh report is correct in its summary of the Penn State child molestation scandal,
the public Paterno of the last few years was a work of fiction. In his place is
a hubristic, indictable hypocrite.
In the last interview before his death, Paterno insisted as
strenuously as a dying man could that he had absolutely no knowledge of a 1998
police inquiry into child molestation accusations against his assistant coach,
Jerry Sandusky. This has always been the critical point in assessing whether
Paterno and other Penn State leaders enabled Sandusky’s crimes.
If Paterno knew about ’98, then he wasn’t some aging granddad who was
deceived, but a canny and unfeeling power broker who put protecting his
reputation ahead of protecting children.
If he knew about ’98, then he understood the import of graduate assistant
Mike McQueary’s distraught account in 2001 that he witnessed Sandusky assaulting
a boy in the Penn State showers.
If he knew about ’98, then he also perjured himself before a grand jury.
Guilty.
Paterno didn’t always give lucid answers in his final interview conducted
with The Washington Post eight days before his death, but on this point he was
categorical and clear as a bell. He pled total, lying ignorance of the ’98
investigation into a local mother’s claim Sandusky had groped her son in the
shower at the football building. How could Paterno have no knowledge of this, I asked him?
“Nobody knew,” he said.
Everybody knew.
Never heard a rumor?
“I never heard a thing,” he said.
He heard everything.
Not a whisper? How is that possible?
“If Jerry’s guilty, nobody found out till after several incidents.”
Paterno’s account of himself is flatly contradicted in damning detail by ex FBI-director Louis Freeh’s report. In a
news conference Thursday, Freeh charged that Paterno, along with athletic
director Timothy Curley, university president Graham Spanier and vice president
Gary Schultz, engaged in a cover-up, “an active agreement of concealment.”
Paterno was not only aware of the ’98 investigation but followed it “closely”
according to Freeh. As did the entire leadership of Penn State. E-mails and
confidential notes by Schultz about the progress of the inquiry prove it.
“Behavior — at best inappropriate @ worst sexual improprieties,” Schultz wrote.
“At min – Poor Judgment.” Schultz also wrote, “Is this opening of pandora’s
box?” and “Other children?”
A May 5, 1998 e-mail from Curley to Schultz and Spanier was titled “Joe
Paterno” and it says, “I have touched base with the coach. Keep us posted.
Thanks.”
A second e-mail dated May 13 1998 from Curley to Schultz is titled “Jerry”
and it says, “Anything new [in] this department? Coach is anxious to know where
it stands.”
There is only one aspect in which the Freeh report does not totally destroy Paterno’s pretension of honesty.
It finds no connection between the ’98 investigation and Sandusky’s resignation
from Paterno’s staff in ’99. The report also suggests that Paterno genuinely
believed the police had found no evidence of a crime.
Paterno can be forgiven for his initial denial, for refusing to believe his
colleague was a child molester in ’98. What’s not forgivable is his sustained
determination to lie from 2001 onward.
This is how Paterno testified in January 2011 before the grand jury. He was
asked: “Other than the [2001] incident that Mike McQueary reported to you, do
you know in any way, through rumor, direct knowledge or any other fashion, of
any other inappropriate sexual conduct by Jerry Sandusky with young boys?”
Paterno replied, “I do not know of anything else that Jerry would be involved
in of that nature, no. I do not know of it.”
Paterno’s family continued to insist Thursday via a statement that Paterno’s
account was not inconsistent with the facts, and he “always believed, as we do,
that the full truth should be uncovered.”
But Paterno was no more interested in the full truth than Walt Disney.
In his final interview, he played the faux-naif who insisted
he had “never heard of rape and a man.” Who hadn’t followed up on McQueary’s
report out of squeamishness. Who was wary of interfering in university
“procedure.” Who insisted it was unfair to put Penn State on trial along with a
pedophile, and that this was not “a football scandal.”
In fact, in 2001 Paterno had every reason to suspect Sandusky was a serial
defiler of children. In fact, Paterno was not reluctant to interfere in
university procedure; he helped dictate it. In fact, this was a
football scandal. The crimes were committed by a former assistant football coach
in the football building. Ten boys, and 45 criminal counts, at least five of
them molested on the Penn State campus after 1998 when Paterno committed the
awful misjudgment of continuing to allow Sandusky to bring boys to his locker
room, so sure was he that Sandusky was “a good guy.”
We can’t un-rape and un-molest those boys. We can’t remove them from the
showers and seize them back from the hands of Sandusky. That should have been an
unrelenting source of rage and grief to Paterno. Yet in perhaps the most
damaging observation of all, the Freeh report accuses Paterno and his colleagues
of “a striking lack of empathy” for the victims.
Everything else about Paterno must now be questioned; other details about him
begin to nag. You now wonder if his self-defense was all an exercise in sealing
off watertight compartments, leaving colleagues on the outside to drown. You
wonder if he performed a very neat trick in disguising himself as a modest and
benevolent man. The subtle but constant emphasis on his Ivy League education,
the insistence that Penn State football had higher standards, now looks more
like rampant elitism.
Undeniably, for many years Paterno did virtuous work at Penn
State. His combined winning records and graduation rates were indeed much higher
than those of his peers. It’s a relevant part of the Penn State affair and
worth stating, because it contributed to the institutional response. The Freeh
report cited “numerous individual failings,” but it also found “weaknesses of
the University’s culture, governance, administration, compliance policies and
procedures for protecting children.” As other commentators have rightly
observed, Paterno’s huge successes helped form those potholes. He was
the university’s culture.
He was the self-appointed arbiter of character and justice in State College.
He had decided Sandusky was “a good man” in 1998, and he simply found it too
hard to admit he made a fatal misjudgment and gave a child molester the office
nearest to his. He was more interested in protecting a cardboard cutout legacy
than the flesh and blood of young men.
The only explanation I can find for this “striking lack of empathy” is
self-absorption. In asking how a paragon of virtue could have behaved like such
a thoroughly bad guy, the only available answer is that Paterno fell prey to the
single most corrosive sin in sports: the belief that winning on the field makes
you better and more important than other people.
For previous columns by Sally Jenkins, visit washingtonpost.com/jenkins.
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