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  Minnesota Attorney Files Suit in Penn State Case

Winona Daily News
December 1, 2011

http://www.winonadailynews.com/news/local/article_851ab694-1bdf-11e1-98aa-001cc4c002e0.html

The lawyer of a man suing a former Winona priest for sexual abuse became the first attorney on Wednesday to file suit in the Penn State child sex-abuse scandal.

Jeffrey Anderson, a Minnesota-based attorney who specializes in clergy sexual-abuse cases, represents a client identified only as 29-year-old John Doe who is seeking a minimum of $400,000 in damages for sexual abuse, negligence and emotional distress, among other claims.

The lawsuit accuses former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky of abusing the man more than 100 times from 1992, when the man was 10, until 1996 in encounters at the coach’s State College home, in a Penn State locker room and on trips. The account echoes a grand jury’s description of trips, gifts and attention lavished on other alleged victims.

The man, who filed a complaint with law enforcement Tuesday, is not part of the criminal case.

The man never told anyone about the alleged abuse until Sandusky was charged this month with abusing other boys. The accuser long thought he was the only victim and was mired in guilt and self-loathing, Anderson said.

“I am hurting and have been for a long time because of what happened, but feel now even more tormented that I have learned of so many other kids were abused after me,” the plaintiff said in a statement his lawyer read aloud at a news conference.

The lawsuit names Sandusky, the university and The Second Mile charity as defendants. The man says he knew the coach through the charity, which Sandusky founded in 1977, ostensibly to help disadvantaged children in central Pennsylvania.

The man was not referenced in the grand jury report that charges Sandusky with abusing eight boys over a 15-year period.

Anderson said he believes Sandusky was a predator who could not control his sexual impulses toward children. He harshly criticized officials at Penn State and The Second Mile who failed to report their suspicions and put a stop to any abuse.

“We need to address the institutional recklessness and failures,” Anderson said. “Was it because of power, money, fear, loyalty, lack of education?“

Sandusky has acknowledged that he showered with boys but denied molesting them. His lawyer did not immediately return a message about the lawsuit. The university said it had not yet seen the complaint.

The man who filed the lawsuit said Sandusky gave him gifts, travel and privileges after meeting him through his charity in 1992. The abuse began shortly afterward, the suit said.

Anderson suggested that it ended four years later because Sandusky was not sexually interested in older teens.

Sandusky was charged in early November with abusing eight boys, some on campus. A grand jury said the allegations were not immediately brought to the attention of authorities even though high-level people at Penn State apparently knew about at least one of them.

The scandal has resulted in the departures of school President Graham Spanier and longtime coach Joe Paterno. Athletic Director Tim Curley has been placed on administrative leave, and Vice President Gary Schultz, who was in charge of the university’s police department, has stepped down.

Schultz and Curley are charged with lying to the grand jury and failure to report to police, and Sandusky is charged with child sex abuse. All maintain their innocence.

By Anderson’s count, the grand jury report lists 17 adults were made aware of complaints or suspicions about the coach over the years, including those who knew of a 1998 complaint that Sandusky had showered with a Second Mile boy. Police pursued that mother’s complaint, and compiled more than 100 pages of investigatory notes, but no charges were filed.

Had John Doe known about that, he might have come forward to a parent or counselor years ago, Anderson said.

“Why were so many people, for so long, making choices that protected the institutions and not the children?” Anderson asked. “It’s not just about Penn State, it’s about all of us.”

Anderson, representing an unnamed party, filed suit in 2006 in Ramsey County District Court against the Winona Diocese and the Archdiocese of Minneapolis and St. Paul, accusing Thomas Adamson of sexually abusing him from 1980 to 1982 at a Burnsville, Minn., church, where the party served as an altar boy.

 
 

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