Coaches at Penn State with Sandusky find selves on defence
HARRISBURG, Pa. — Newly disclosed allegations from men who have accused Jerry Sandusky of sexual abuse raise fresh questions about what his fellow Penn State assistant coaches might have seen or known in the decades before his November 2011 arrest, and why they’ve largely stayed silent since.
Sandusky’s former colleagues found themselves on the defensive this week because of claims in court documents that some of the couple of dozen assistants who spent time in the program while he was there may have witnessed Sandusky abusing children as far back as the 1980s.
Aside from blanket denials made through lawyers and spokespeople, the former assistants who worked alongside Sandusky have said little publicly about the scandal.
“These guys are very sensitive to their employment. It’s not easy to go out and replace a half-million-dollar income,” said Penn State Trustee Anthony Lubrano, who is close with the family of the late head football coach Joe Paterno. “I get why they’re not standing in front of a microphone screaming from the top of their lungs.”


