Jerry Sandusky gets at least 30 years in prison for sex abuse

BELLEFONTE, Pa. (AP) — Jerry Sandusky, maintaining his innocence, was sentenced Tuesday to at least 30 years in prison — effectively a life sentence — in the child sexual abuse scandal that brought shame to Penn State and led to coach Joe Paterno's downfall.
A defiant Sandusky gave a rambling statement in which he denied the allegations and talked about his life in prison and the pain of being away from his family.
"I've forgiven, I've been forgiven. I've comforted others, I've been comforted. I've been kissed by dogs, I've been bit by dogs," he said. "I've conformed, I've also been different. I've been me. I've been loved, I've been hated."
Three victims spoke, often fighting back tears. One looked Sandusky in the eyes at times. Two of the men exchanged a long embrace after court was adjourned.
The 68-year-old former Penn State assistant coach was found guilty in June of 45 counts of child sexual abuse, convicted of molesting 10 boys over a 15-year period. Witnesses said Sandusky used the charitable organization he founded for troubled children as his personal hunting ground to find and groom boys to become his victims.
Judge John Cleland handed down a 30- to 60-year term. He called Sandusky dangerous, saying he betrayed children and abused their trust.
Sandusky's arrest 11 months ago, and the details that came out during his trial over the summer, transformed Sandusky's public image from a college coach who had been widely admired for his work with The Second Mile charity into that of a reviled pervert who preyed on the very youngsters who sought his help.
Eight of the boys he was found guilty of molesting testified at his trial, describing a range of abuse that included fondling, oral sex and anal intercourse. One of the prosecution's star witnesses, former graduate assistant Mike McQueary, testified that he saw Sandusky raping a boy in a locker room shower.
Sandusky has consistently maintained his innocence and plans to appeal. One element of the appeal is expected to be a claim that the defense did not have time to adequately prepare for trial. Sandusky was charged in November, following a lengthy investigation.
Sandusky said he knows in his heart that he did not do what he called "disgusting acts," repeating a comment he made in a three-minute monologue that aired Monday night by Penn State Com Radio. In the radio recording, Sandusky described himself as the victim of a coordinated conspiracy among Penn State, investigators, civil attorneys, the media and others.
His statement in court lasted 15 minutes and his voice cracked as he spoke of missing his loved ones.
"I speak today with hope in my heart for a brighter day, not knowing if that day will come," Sandusky said. "Many moments have been spent looking for a purpose. Maybe it will help others, some vulnerable children who might have been abused, might not be, as a result of the publicity."
His statement also included numerous sports references: He said he once told his wife "we're definitely in the fourth quarter" and he referenced the movie "Seabiscuit."
He also spoke of instances in which he said he helped children.
Among the three victims who spoke Tuesday, a young man who said he was 11 when Sandusky groped him in a shower in 1998. He said Sandusky is in denial and should "stop coming up with excuses."
"I've been left with deep painful wounds that you caused and had been buried in the garden of my heart for many years," he said.
Another man said he was 13 when, in 2001, Sandusky lured him into a Penn State sauna and then a shower and then forced him to touch the ex-coach.
"I am troubled with flashbacks of his naked body, something that will never be erased from my memory," he said. "Jerry has harmed children, of which I am one of them."
Before sentencing, Judge Cleland designated Sandusky as a sexually violent predator under the state's Megan's Law. The label essentially has no effect on Sandusky, since its requirement is lifetime registration after a convict is released from prison. Sandusky won't be released on parole before the minimum 30-year term is up.
"The tragedy of this crime is that it's a story of betrayal. The most obvious aspect is your betrayal of 10 children," Cleland told Sandusky. "I'm not going to sentence you to centuries in prison, although the law will permit that." Still, Cleland said, he expected Sandusky to die in prison.
In sentencing the ex-coach, Cleland called Sandusky dangerous, saying, "You abused the trust of those who trusted you." He also called Sandusky's comments in the radio statement about a conspiracy against him "unbelievable."
The scandal brought devastation in State College that will take years to fully assess, as Sandusky's victims are pressing civil claims and a January trial is pending for Gary Schultz and Tim Curley, two university administrators charged with failing to properly report suspicions about Sandusky and lying to the grand jury that investigated him.
Soon after the three were arrested in November, the board of trustees fired Paterno, the school's most famous figure and a man who won two national college football championships in the 1980s. Paterno died of lung cancer in January.
Over the summer, an investigation commissioned by the university and led by former FBI Director Louis Freeh concluded that Paterno and other top officials covered up allegations against Sandusky for years to avoid bad publicity.
The scandal also toppled university President Graham Spanier and led to crippling NCAA sanctions against the football team that included a $60 million fine, a ban on postseason play and a reduction in the number of football scholarships the school can award. The NCAA also erased 14 years of victories for Paterno, stripping him of his standing as major college football's winningest coach.
At least four young men have sued Penn State over the way the university responded to disturbing complaints about Sandusky.
Eight legal teams representing at least 20 young men have surfaced, and the school recently announced an effort to settle as many claims as possible by the end of the year. Several plaintiffs' lawyers were in the courtroom.
Penn State President Rodney Erickson released a statement shortly after the sentence was handed down.
"Our thoughts today, as they have been for the last year, go out to the victims of Jerry Sandusky's abuse," Erickson said. "While today's sentence cannot erase what has happened, hopefully it will provide comfort to those affected by these horrible events."
The third victim who spoke had testified that he was raped over the course of years by Sandusky, including on team trips to bowl games in Texas and Florida.
"I want you to know I don't forgive you and I don't know if I will ever forgive you," he said. "My only regret is that I didn't come forward sooner."
You have to wonder, how many didn't come forward, even all these years later...
@Owt_Raged I have to agree. They would've been more credible had they came forward when it firse happened.
 @JLO I have no doubt he did everything he was accused of. And it's not unusual for victims to wait years to speak out about abuse that happened to them when they were young. I just think there are way more than 10 victims over the last 40 years.
good, for all practical purposes, thats a life sentence.
Â
My next hope is that the inmates will show him a special kind of justice and make his life a living hell.
It is highly doubtful they will put him in regular population, that alone would be a death sentence. Ha! At least this nasty excuse of a human being will rot and die in prison.
Mike McQueary your are a coward and in my mind just as bad as your beloved head coach is. To see a child being raped in the shower and walk off and not stop what was happening is pure evil. I hope you live with the shame of your poor judgement for the rest of your sorry life.
Please, please, please. Learn the difference between "your" and "you're."
And Sandusky has no shame. Maybe it will come, but his statements certainly indicate no remorse (except, of course, for what is happening to him).
The only problem with this story is that it is about 40 years too late. My only wish is that he was younger so that he could serve more time.
Â
NaNaNa na hey hey the next time I want to hear your name is to read your obituary. bub-bye.
Whatever the sentence, it cannot possibly be long enough or painful enough.
That's it? Are you kidding me? With all the appeals that will inevitably come he'll be out in a couple years. I have no doubt he'll have the cushiest prison cell all to himself. Good to know that if I was some famous football coach molesting kids only fetches a light sentence, whereas everyone else would have gotten multiple life sentences.
Betcha he won't be out in two years. If he gets out at all, it will be a sympathy parole to die at home.
 @Mechanic He should die in the prison shower, alone.
 @JamieÂ
Â
Well he may be beaten to death while waiting...and he would surly be killed if he weren't in protective custody. There is no question that his life is over but how much will his memory defile the social mind. I would just like to know that he has gone away forever.
This mentally ill freak should be forced to listen to and old song titled 'The game of Love' 24 hours a day for his entire sentence. In the song it states, "the purpose of a man is to love a woman'' etc...etc.... Not the purpose of a man is to love little boys. Sam Adams probably would remember the song, it's from the 60's.
 @last boyscoutÂ
Â
Don't humanize this piece of social waste by suggesting that he is mentally ill that is an insult and incrimination of every mentally ill person to suggest that he is somehow like them.
Â
This person is a social predator that targeted the weak and young. He had no remorse and no compassion for his victims. He used people for his own purpose without consciousness. That isn't mental illness it is anti-social behavior.
That SOB still thinks he did nothing wrong....good grief! I hope he rotts....
Too bad that the appeal process will eat up more of the tax payers money.
I wish peace and healing for the victims and their families.
And so begins the appeal process for this low life. I pray the conviction and sentencing of this monster will begin the lengthy healing process for the victims. Sandusky no longer has power over them, no longer will he harm other innocent children and maybe they can begin to build the lives that they deserve, free of the demons. And I hope Karma gets those who knew of the abuse and chose football over the kids.
His wife/family should no longer enjoy his wealth in anyway. Take his family worth and pay for his incarceration and victims awards. Somewhere at sometime over this perverts activity his wife/family turned their backs on something, you can bet on it!
Too little, WAY too late. Penn State will always have a shadow over its football program, thanks to the coaching empire that used to be there.Â