For those that want to vent, comiserate, cry in their beer over a sad sordid end to a legendary dynasty that will never be equaled.
http://eccie.net/showthread.php?t=298195
The school will make an example of someone. But, it's unlikely the boys in the front office are willing to fall on their own swords. Originally Posted by seventonine
I hardly find anything wrong with how Penn State handled the situation. If you find a family member with several pounds of cocaine in his closet do u nark him to authorities to eventually destroy his life or deal with it internally?From what I've read, Pennsylvania law (23 Pa.C.S. §6311 - Child Protective Services Law) places an affirmative responsibility on school administrators to report suspected child abuse. That makes the Penn State situation different from wreckshop's hypothetical cocaine discovery.
I think they should have fired the assistant though. Originally Posted by wreckshop
The cases are not strictly analogous, but I feel the same regret about how this will tarnish Paterno's legacy as I did about how Pete Rose's being put on the permanent ineligibility list. It's a sad situation.
It's very hurtful that this man (Paterno) will have his life summed up with this situation. His life is so very much more.
I really hate it that he is linked to this sad and sick mess. Originally Posted by DEAR_JOHN
Exactly. JP should have followed up. Should have banned him from locker room. JP didn't have to wait for anyone to take action, he was The Man.
On the surface, it appears JP's big mistake was not following up, forcing the issue, or outing this jackass to someone with the balls to do anything about it.
Originally Posted by seventonine
From what I've read, Pennsylvania law (23 Pa.C.S. §6311 - Child Protective Services Law) places an affirmative responsibility on school administrators to report suspected child abuse. That makes the Penn State situation different from wreckshop's hypothetical cocaine discovery. Originally Posted by chicagoboyexactly...he is a mandated reporter as am I.