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Penn St fined $60M, wins vacated from '98-11


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Penn State
Penn State
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Updated: 7/23/2012 8:46 am Published: 7/23/2012 8:20 am
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The NCAA slammed Penn State with an unprecedented series of penalties Monday, including a $60 million fine and the loss of all coach Joe Paterno's victories from 1998-2011, in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal.

Other sanctions include a four-year ban on bowl games, the loss of 20 scholarships per year over four years and five years' probation. The NCAA also said that any current or incoming football players are free to immediately transfer and compete at another school.

NCAA President Mark Emmert announced the staggering sanctions at a news conference in Indianapolis. Though the NCAA stopped short of imposing the "death penalty" - shutting down the Nittany Lions' program completely - the punishment is still crippling for a team that is trying to start over with a new coach and a new outlook.

Sandusky, a former Penn State defensive coordinator, was found guilty in June of sexually abusing young boys, sometimes on campus. An investigation commissioned by the school and released July 12 found that Paterno, who died in January, and several other top officials at Penn State stayed quiet for years about accusations against Sandusky.

Emmert fast-tracked penalties rather than go through the usual circuitous series of investigations and hearings. The NCAA said the $60 million is equivalent to the annual gross revenue of the football program. The money must be paid into an endowment for external programs preventing child sexual abuse or assisting victims and may not be used to fund such programs at Penn State.

"Football will never again be placed ahead of educating, nurturing and protecting young people," Emmert said.

Emmert had earlier said he had "never seen anything as egregious" as the horrific crimes of Sandusky and the cover-up by Paterno and others at the university, including former Penn State President Graham Spanier and athletic director Tim Curley.

The investigation headed by former FBI Director Louis Freeh said that Penn State officials kept what they knew from police and other authorities for years, enabling the abuse to go on.

There had been calls across the nation for Penn State to receive the "death penalty," and Emmert had not ruled out that possibility as late as last week - though Penn State did not fit the criteria for it. That punishment is for teams that commit a major violation while already being sanctioned.

(Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)
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ArkansasYankee - 7/23/2012 6:07 PM
0 Votes
I guess I would have to agree; they should have recieved the death penalty. And as someone told me today; too bad Joe Pa didn't live to see this happen to his statue, his victories, and his reputation.

1gmama - 7/23/2012 4:04 PM
0 Votes
so sad for all he football player that have worked hard since 1998 they are getting screwed too.

golfdude2 - 7/23/2012 3:47 PM
0 Votes
WOW - that is huge! I think schools only get 25 full scholorships total, not much left, won't be too much focus on football up there now.

itsjustme - 7/23/2012 2:09 PM
0 Votes
$60M fine will eat up a lot of the University's pocket book as well as it will hurt recruits, enrollment and the entire community. Penn State will be in the hole for over a decade trying to get over this. They dont have a coach worth mentioning, cant go to a bowl game for 4 years, lost a ton of scholarships and have to foot a $60M fine. Student athletes will avoid Penn State like the plague. Oh well, sucks to be them.

ender929 - 7/23/2012 11:41 AM
2 Votes
Just my 2 cents, but it sounds like they still put football ahead of all other considerations. They still enjoyed and profited from all of those past victories, while the defeated teams did not. I think if ever there was just cause for the "death penalty", this was it. How can they ever use it now that they've decided that this crime wasn't worthy of it? It still sounds like all of those children weren't as important as big college football. Just my opinion.

itsjustme - 7/23/2012 11:03 AM
1 Vote
I bet Petrino is glad this happened, takes the spotlight of off him. LOL. The NCAA did what it should have done. Penn State is what it is, State Penn.

ArkansasYankee - 7/23/2012 10:10 AM
1 Vote
The statue is gone, some of his victory's are gone; now they need to remove the child abuse enabler's name from the library. Joe Pa, you are not the "god" Penn State alumni, students, and faculty think you are. And you just might be in trouble with the one true God for allowing Sandusky to continue his disgusting behavior.

wpsark - 7/23/2012 9:52 AM
1 Vote
seems fair enough

ArkansasYankee - 7/23/2012 9:06 AM
1 Vote
I love it!
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