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Another PSU trustee urges close look at Paterno report
BY GENARO C. ARMAS, Associated Press

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STATE COLLEGE -- Another Penn State trustee is urging a close look at a critique commissioned by Joe Paterno's family of a school-sanctioned report by former FBI director Louis Freeh on the Jerry Sandusky child sex-abuse scandal.

Trustee Ryan McCombie said in a statement late Monday that the findings should give pause to "closing the book and moving on" from the scandal.

McCombie stressed that he was speaking only for himself, not the board. Trustee Alvin Clemens said in a separate statement Monday that the board should re-examine Freeh's findings after the analysis commissioned by late coach Joe Paterno's family raised serious questions.

"We need to take a breath. read the entire (Paterno family) report and digest it," McCombie said. "Only then can we begin an open, thoughtful and useful conversation about what happened in Happy Valley and how to prevent it from happening anywhere again."

The family's review called Freeh's report flawed and unfounded, saying it resulted in a "rush to injustice."

Freeh has stood by his findings released in July that Paterno and three former administrators conspired to conceal allegations against Sandusky, a retired defensive coordinator. In a statement Sunday, Freeh described the family's effort as "self-serving" in an attempt to shape Paterno's legacy.

The family had held off on responding in detail until its own review was complete and released over the weekend.

Since then, Paterno's son and former assistant coach, Jay Paterno, has been making nonstop appearances on radio and television programs.

"We have to keep working at it," Jay Paterno said Tuesday in a phone interview. "We're interested in getting the truth out."

Among experts hired for the review were Dick Thornburgh, a former U.S. attorney general and Pennsylvania governor; and former FBI profiler James Clemente, who worked at the bureau under Freeh. Clemente's biography listed an assignment with the FBI's Behavioral Analysis Unit Crimes Against Children Section.

Thornburgh, too, knows Freeh. Both Thornburgh and Clemente initially were hesitant about conducting the review, Jay Paterno said, until becoming convinced otherwise after reading the Freeh report.

Freeh's report didn't properly factor dynamics of child sexual victimization and "misinterpreted evidence and behavior and reached erroneous conclusions," Clemente said in his analysis. He offered recommendations for prevention and to raise awareness.

Another trustee who joined the board last summer, lawyer and former football player Adam Taliaferro, has said the family's report should be given as close a read as the Freeh report. Both Taliaferro and McCombie drew support from some alumni disgruntled with how university leadership has handled the scandal.

They were not board members when Paterno was fired in November 2011, days after Sandusky was arrested. Sandusky is serving a prison sentence of 30 to 60 years after being convicted last summer on 45 criminal counts.

 


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