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Maybe you missed this but Barron has already disparaged the Freeh report with subtle comments about what it was and what it wasn't and he still leaves himself room for more condemnation or outright dismissal in the future should all the charges be dropped against C/S/S. Just FYI Roberto is in the process of filing that right now for Curley in the PA supreme court..
Barron has never disparaged the Freeh report as regards its conclusions regarding Curley, Schultz, Spanier or Paterno. Never.
Barron's January 2016 comment about "not being a fan of the Freeh Report" was in reference to the Freeh blaming Penn State as a whole (his "culture" comments). A quote from Barron from January 2016: "There’s no doubt in my mind what was completely and totally wrong was the notion that this entire alumni base, our students, our faculty, our staff, got the blame for what occurred.”
Freeh's statement that "there is a culture of reverence for the football program that is ingrained at all levels of the campus community" is 100% bull kaka. "ALL" levels???
Come on. As at every University, there are tons of Penn State folk who could give a damn less about football or athletics. And among those who do care about football, many of us (myself included) hardly "revere" the football program. Penn State football is something to watch and enjoy, but it's hardly a centerpiece of my life, or something I would willingly sacrifice for.
Second, Wetzel nailed the overall theme that by challenging the insurance companies, Barron made himself part of this. If you stay humble, don't cave to the pressure that people like Lubrano and the Paterno faction are bringing, you move on, the school is better off and things like this never make the news cycle. But he didn't and you have what happened. That's really the point of the story. It has nothing to do with the $ per se as Wetzel said. Yes money is involved but as Wetzel pointed out the university has a 3$ billion endowment and these cases are chump change. It has everything to do with the inability to let go of something that the rest of the world moved on from 4 years ago.
Lastly as Wetzel pointed out the school settled the cases by placing nondisclosures on every victim that got a check. But they left themselves an open door to make general statements about the relative veracity of each case which is tool used to drive public opinion. It's done all the time. They are able to call into question the truthfulness of some cases by simply saying it was easier/cheaper to just settle and not go to court but we don't really believe much of what was reported. Very slick but also very transparent in execution because they did actually deny claims outright but that won't be mentioned in those press statements.
Penn State's strategy of "pay every claim we can't easily disprove, and then go fight with the insurance companies" began in 2012 ---- well before Barron became President (2014). He didn't set into motion the original strategy. Besides, the original strategy is the correct one (it's not ideal, but it's the. Why pay an 8-digit amount of money when you think someone else is legally obligated to pay a portion of it? I mean, Penn State did WIN a portion of that lawsuit.
I get it, the insurance company is pissed and angry that Penn State filed claims. Well, that's what court is for. They won a portion of the lawsuit, they lost a portion of the lawsuit. They have 2 choices: pay up and move on, or appeal. Or a 3rd choice: appeal while simultaneously leaking information from the sealed depositions. Fair enough, but they're a pig playing in the mud here.
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