MaxBuck;2031054; said:
I think everyone should put themselves in Paterno's shoes when he hears the allegation. Do you believe the word of a graduate assistant or of a close friend you've known for nearly 30 years without any indication of perversion?
Of course you give credence to the word of a guy you've worked with for 6 years, when he tells you he directly witnessed a sexual assault and/or forcible rape of a minor, perpetrated by a former employee inside your building, to which you gave him access. Credence doesn't mean you consider it case-closed, but it means you take it seriously enough that you feel the police absolutely have to be involved, one way or another. Moreover, there
was prior indication of perversion by Sandusky. The radio interview linked a few pages back makes some good points. Sandusky had been investigated by the DA for sexual assault of a minor, at a time when he was Paterno's DC, when Paterno was not nearly the enfeebled old man he is today, and when Paterno had been running that program for four decades so tightly that he knew absolutely everything that went on within his fiefdom. There is no way Paterno didn't know about those earlier allegations, and I think it has been plausibly suggested that those allegations were the reason Sandusky had "retired". But again, even if you make the enormous leap of faith that Paterno was completely oblivious to the earlier allegations against Sandusky, I don't see how it's understandable to effectively let it slide when you are told directly by a person you consider trustworthy who has no earthly reason to fabricate the story that he directly witnessed an assault/rape in your building.
MaxBuck;2031116; said:
Like I said, the obligation to go to the police rested primarily on McQueary, who actually saw a rape attack yet didn't go to the appropriate authorities.
Frankly, I think it's more understandable that McQueary wanted to bring the chief on board before publicly leveling serious allegations against his own former superior, than it is that Paterno wanted to pass the buck when hearing direct testimony of those allegations about his inferior. McQueary plausibly wanted some support from someone in a position of power, before going after someone in a position of power. Paterno didn't need any support, because he had as much power as anyone. Of course, the biggest lapse (to put it mildly) in all of this is probably that McQueary apparently turned around and walked away, rather than physically intervening, when he saw a boy being sodomized.