By Mark Esposito, Guest Blogger
Author note: This is the fifth in a series about the child sexual abuse scandal at The Pennsylvania State University that helped bring down iconic football coach Joe Paterno and three top officials at the premier public college in Pennsylvania.
Penn State’s ousted president and amateur magician, Graham Spanier, enjoyed a well-deserved reputation for secrecy while leading the state’s flagship public university. In one instance, Spanier became incensed when he learned that the Harrisburg Patriot-News had obtained the salaries of the top PSU officials — including Joe Paterno — from the state pension board. (Paterno had consistently made mention of the fact that he received around $500,000 per year as a coach, donating much of it back to PSU. Many prominent FBS football coaches make up to ten times that amount and it appears Paterno was fudging a bit on his salary.) Spanier embarked on a five-year fight to block publication of the salaries, taking the case through the entire appeals process and up to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. Spanier lost at every level. Undaunted and against the odds, he successfully lobbied Pennsylvania state lawmakers to reject closing the loophole which exempted college employees salaries from the state’s “right-to-know” law. With that legislative prestidigitation, he just made the problem disappear.
The Last Chance to Save the Board
Secrecy and back door politicking were also the tools used by Spanier to secure his control of university operations and to insure only a timid and uninformed rubber stamping from the Board of Trustees. This proclivity did not go unnoticed by at least some Board members. In 2004, seven of them drafted good governance proposals calling for more scrutiny of the President and his decision-making. They were presented to the PSU Board of Trustees but a full vote was deferred. The changes to the by-laws would have greatly enhanced the Board’s oversight of Spanier and clarified its role as the final arbiter in matters of both policy and day-to day operations like removing senior administrative officers. You can read the proposed changes here.
Long-time board member, Joel Myers, has said the changes would have prevented situations like the Sandusky scandal
from escaping the Board’s notice since the by-law changes required the president to present periodic reports on university operations and also empowered the Board to obtain follow-up reports. Spanier sensed the threat and fought the proposals deftly and, with the aid of then chairwoman and current general counsel, Cynthia Baldwin, the matter was tabled before a vote could be taken. (Spanier’s cohort, Cynthia Baldwin, has been criticized in the Freeh report for opposing an independent investigation of the Board’s actions or inactions during the Sandusky scandal while serving as PSU’s General Counsel thus completing the circle of secrecy). The failed attempt to rein in Spanier’s presidency was the last chance for the Board to fulfill its obligation to oversee university operations.
Graham Spanier: The Man

Spanier’s background would not suggest a callous and secretive approach to matters involving child abuse. In fact, just the opposite as he was a victim of abuse himself. Born in Cape Town, South Africa, to parents who had fled the Nazis, he was raised in Chicago where his family settled after becoming disgusted with the apartheid system that reminded Spanier’s father of Nazi Germany. Sadly, Fritz Spanier was not quite so principled or sensitive in The Big Onion. Spanier’s prominent “prize-fighters nose” came from his dad’s raucous temperament according to long-time friend, Michael Oriard, an associate dean at Oregon State. Of his father, Spanier said in 1988:
His marriage was dismal, his family life was decidedly unhappy, and his abusive behavior toward his wife and children, tolerated in the 1950s, would have resulted in legal intervention today.
Years later, in what might be a telling comment on his approach to managing the Sandusky crisis, Spanier asked the audience of the the 4,400-member National Council on Family Relations over which he served as President, “Why do so many children experience abuse, disruption, poverty, or hunger, yet somehow, against great odds, reach adulthood with the notion that family life can be rewarding?” The answer, he theorized, may be that a powerful commitment to marriage and family is being transmitted even in families that could be described as unhappy, broken, pathological or nonexistent. Some might argue it is a misguided commitment by a victim to the source of their abuse that elevates psuedo-security over the human yearning for justice and vindication — sort of a kiddie Stockholm Syndrome. But, of course, Spanier’s the expert here in so many ways.
Bright and curious, Spanier overcame his upbringing to thrive in academic settings. The Iowa State and Northwestern graduate made his bones as a sociologist and family therapist with a specialty in researching family relationships. Author of over 10 books and scads of papers, some of his areas of interest were marital relations and the dynamics of child abuse situations. His range was varied however, as he wrote extensively on sex education and social taboos involving families. In one paper in 1975 for the “Archives of Sexual Behavior,”, he commented on the virtues of wife swapping;
This article attempts to illuminate the understanding of swinging, or mate swapping, an increasingly common form of extramarital sexual activity. A theoretical formulation argues that swinging is a form of extramarital sexual activity which serves to define as good and acceptable a behavior that in other forms and in the past has been considered deviant and immoral.
By temperament he was easy going and affable. Friends have said the only time they remember him being visibly angry was when he observed one child striking another for no reason.
Backdropped by striking irony, the Freeh report made specific criticisms of Spanier’s handling of the McCleary child abuse complaint saying Spanier and other upper echelon management at PSU, exhibited “total disregard for the safety and welfare of Sandusky’s child victims [and] failed to take any steps for 14 years to protect the children who Sandusky victimized.” A searing public indictment against someone who had overcome abuse himself and then committed himself to studying family dynamics of the problem. Spanier had come full circle from his National Council on Family Relations speech only to find himself pilloried in the press for too much loyalty to his sometimes abusive academic family.
The Seeds of Corruption
What could then cause this breach of faith among the best and brightest in American academe? Historian Theodore White observed that “All endeavors which are directed to a purely worldly end, contain within themselves the seeds of their own corruption.” Here, the seeds of corruption corroding the Penn State football program and the university itself, may have been planted just one year before the infamous Sandusky assault by another allegation of sexual abuse against a PSU educator.
In 2001, a private investigator living in Phoenix, telephoned Penn State officials and eventually spoke to Spanier about troubling allegations of sexual abuse by a PSU employee in the late 1970s. In chilling detail, he described the abuse that he said occurred at the State College campus and elsewhere. Paul McLaughlin, 45, claimed that he had been sexually abused by a prominent PSU professor and two of the prof’s friends. In the call, he pointedly told Spanier that he had a taped confession from the professor. The PSU president wouldn’t hear it – didn’t even want to acknowledge it. “He told me whatever I wanted to get from the school, I wasn’t going to get it, and this was a guy with an impeccable reputation, and unless he was convicted of a crime, they weren’t interested,” McLaughlin said. Spanier told McLaughlin not to bother sending the tape. McLaughlin sent him the tape anyway.

McLaughlin told Spanier that from ages 11 to 15 he was sexually abused by three men, one of whom he claimed was prominent professor of education, John T. Neisworth. The alleged victim claimed that he repressed the memory but when it finally reemerged he was shocked to learn that Neisworth continued to work for the university. Neisworth, who has done pioneering work with autistic children, has consistently denied the allegations and has refused to talk to the press. However in 2001, McLaughlin called the professor and engaged in conversation pretending he enjoyed their encounters and had groomed an underage male lover of his own. According to McLaughlin, Neisworth incriminated himself on an audio tape in which the professor allegedly admitted to serving the youth alcohol and engaging in sexual activities. Cecil County, Maryland authorities transcribed the tape and brought charges against Neisworth. Those criminal charges were ultimately dismissed after the tape was deemed inadmissible, but McLaughlin claims he sued Neisworth in civil court and was offered a “six-figure” confidential settlement to resolve the matter. He accepted the offer.

As for reaction from Penn State and Spanier, what would become an all too familiar pattern emerged: McLaughlin’s tape was returned unopened, telephone calls were forgotten, and the university did nothing to discipline Neisworth. Since the police already had the matter, it could not be argued that Penn State had neglected a duty to report the allegations. One Penn State official, David Monk, Dean of the College of Education, did acknowledge receiving the complaint, if not the tape, saying, “I did take the charges seriously and immediately determined that Mr. Neisworth’s Penn State duties did not involve direct contact with children.” Curious circumstance for an internationally known educator who wrote “The Autism Encyclopedia,” and 12 other treatises about autistic children. Neisworth retired the following year as Spanier oversaw yet another disappearing act by an accused PSU employee, much as he did when Sandusky retired in 1999 after allegations of child abuse surfaced against him publicly in 1998. (Freeh has found no evidence linking the two events but the coincidence remains and Sandusky for once isn’t talking.)
In a 2005 article, Monk said that he thought that Neisworth had done no clinical work with children on the campus and that “Penn State is not investigating Neisworth’s activities at the university.” And like Sandusky, not all ties to PSU were cut. Neisworth remained in an emeritus status that he still enjoys today, participated in university seminars and workshops, and taught remote classes and generally enjoyed the role of a distinguished retired scholar.
The disregard for the veracity of McLaughlin’s complaint is bad enough, and the refusal to even hear the alleged taped confession is mind-boggling, but perhaps most incredible is Monk’s analysis of the university’s moral responsibility. Neisworth’s “duties did not involve direct contact with children,” intones the polymath, thus it follows that, in Penn State’s view, no concern need be shown by the university for his contact with children away from the campus. That’s quite an incredible take on a complaint of child sexual abuse. The total disregard for the safety of children who might come into contact with the alleged employee-pedophile is likewise shocking on a professional and human level. It’s also the same approach taken by Spanier, Shultz, Paterno, and Curley, just a year later when they decided that the best option in the face of a credible report of child rape was to tell Sandusky that his youthful “guests” would no longer be welcome in the Lasch Building’s shower stalls.
What happens away from Penn State stays away from Penn State, or so it was tragically claimed.
The Shanghai Gone Awry
Spanier’s undue concern for secrecy and his desire to control university operations outside of Board scrutiny may have created a situation that even he can’t make disappear. By keeping a blind-fold over the Board, he may have given an opening to victim’s lawyers by allowing them to argue the Board negligently failed to discharge their oversight duties. Freeh explicitly stated in his report that, “The board’s over-confidence in Spanier’s abilities, and its failure to conduct oversight and responsible inquiry of Spanier and senior university officials, hindered the board’s ability to deal with the most profound crisis ever confronted by the University.” That comment hits like blood in the water for lawyers seeking to prove that the Board shirked its legal obligation to oversee the university and its officials thus permitting the abuse to occur through its collective negligence. “This could increase our liability,” a current trustee said, “possibly by millions.”
Calls for the resignation of the Board of Trustees had fallen on deaf ears until this Thursday when ex-chairman, Steve Garban, resigned. Garban was harshly criticized by the Freeh report for his stewardship of the Board during the Sandusky scandal. Judge Freeh singled out Garban and suggested that he was twice told of the Sandusky matter but secreted it away from the entire Board thus depriving it of the opportunity to prepare for the looming crisis. In a letter to Board chairwoman Karen Peetz, Garban said: “It is clear to me that my presence on the board has become a distraction and an impediment to your efforts to move forward.” Many have suggested Garban was pressured to resign by fellow board members as a sign that the board was changing course, and in order to avoid the NCAA’s death penalty reserved for especially egregious lapses in institutional control over the football program. The NCAA’s hard-nosed President Mark Emmert has pointedly refused to rule out the death penalty for the program saying, “I’ve never seen anything as egregious as this in terms of just overall conduct and behavior inside a university and hope never to see it again.” A shutdown of the program could cost Penn State about $70 million according to experts.
Recently, Spanier’s lawyers have countered the allegations of the Freeh report claiming it was unfair and full of errors. They also claim Spanier was never advised of the allegations of child sexual abuse at the university and that a federal investigation into his security clearance exonerated him. At this point, however, those protestations of innocence seem like the railings of King Canute against a rising tide of recrimination.
The Duty of the Strong
The most disheartening feature of this sad case of pedophilia is the utter unexpectedness of its enablers. Child abusers come from every walk of life and their corrupt brain wiring is not understood. Sandusky is an enigma of our species. However, privileged academics earning hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of dollars from an adoring public and supporters of the university are understood. We expect a level of fidelity, trust, and responsibility in the discharge of their duties that transcends the base motives of greed, lust, and silence when good men would speak. We demand that they be held to account to us for transgressions against us, and we need not tolerate the coy equivocations of a child when offered by the privileged in their own defense. Finally, these men owed a duty — both as public men and simply as men themselves — to save helpless children from the abominations that were perpetrated on them by one whom these men both knew and knew too well.
It was French playwright Victor Hugo who, with the imprint of the bloody French Revolution still seared in the collective mind of his countrymen, declaimed:
The little people must be sacred to the big ones, and it is from the rights of the weak that the duty of the strong is comprised.
Some in the palaces of leadership at Penn State — like the Bourbon kings of old — ignored this irremeable law of duty as they had so many other things. They should not be surprised by the magnitude of the reckoning.
Source: ESPN and New York Times; and examiner.com
~Mark Esposito, Guest Blogger

Malisha 1, July 21, 2012 at 8:32 pm
Matt Johnson: What makes you think I think you are nice?
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I’m nicer than you.
BTW, Mark . . . excellent article in the ongoing series. Maybe the best so far.
Malisha,
While a PR maneuver without a doubt, even though it is the right thing to do, removing the statue will do nothing to mitigate any potential civil suit damages against Penn State.
I don’t have a good feeling about Spanier that goes beyond what has been exposed about his cowardice in stopping the abuse.
I wonder where it is in Beaver Stadium. Is it on the sidelines for the fans to know that Joe Pa is with them? Is in the locker room for the football players to genuflect? Is it in a storage room where it is out of sight and out of mind? Removing it was a wise thing for the university in trying to change its image. Even a good thing considering it was a rallying point for those willing to overlook Paterno’s enabling of Sandusky. Let’s see where they put it. It will help understand how genuine their sense of shame.
They took down the statue to lessen the impact of the civil lawsuits that are going to be rolling in for years…look out!
Joe Paterno Statue At Penn State Taken Down
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/22/joe-paterno-statue-penn-state_n_1692683.html
Excerpt:
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — The famed statue of Joe Paterno was taken down from outside the Penn State football stadium Sunday, eliminating a key piece of the iconography surrounding the once-sainted football coach accused of burying child sex abuse allegations against a retired assistant.
Workers lifted the statue off its base and used a forklift to move it into Beaver Stadium as the 100 to 150 students watching chanted, “We are Penn State.”
The university announced earlier Sunday that it was taking down the monument in the wake of an investigative report that found the late coach and three other top Penn State administrators concealed sex abuse claims against retired assistant coach Jerry Sandusky.
A spokeswoman for the Paterno family did not immediately return phone and email messages Sunday morning.
Construction vehicles and police arrived shortly after dawn Sunday, barricading the street and sidewalks near the statue, erecting a chain-link fence then concealing the statue with a blue tarp.
Penn State President Rod Erickson said he decided to have the statue removed and put into storage because it “has become a source of division and an obstacle to healing.”
“I believe that, were it to remain, the statue will be a recurring wound to the multitude of individuals across the nation and beyond who have been the victims of child abuse,” Erickson said in a statement released at 7 a.m. Sunday.
He said Paterno’s name will remain on the campus library because it “symbolizes the substantial and lasting contributions to the academic life and educational excellence that the Paterno family has made to Penn State University.”
The bronze sculpture outside Beaver Stadium has been a rallying point for students and alumni outraged over Paterno’s firing four days after Sandusky’s Nov. 5 arrest – and grief-stricken over the Hall of Fame coach’s Jan. 22 death at age 85.
Woah, Frankly, you sure got mad about something that didn’t seem too terribly offensive. Or am I just so silly and passive I read something and failed to see how it condemned us all — and showed my Pollyanna side?
The Navy, I think I should say, is a very respectable “fighting force” — I wish we never needed anything like it, of course. Maybe if everyone were as slow to anger as I appear to be, we could do away with all our military branches and get happy. But in the meantime I have to feel grateful that someone other than me joins those military forces, leaving me to do other stuff that is usually less dangerous than going to the movies or being “troubled” in a college town in Pennsylvania.
Matt you are a friggin moron – so full of yourself you are incapable of empathy or many other human emotions that decent humans can feel. How nice that you know exactly how you, as a 12 year old boy, would have responded to such a horrible situation. How nice for you to be so sure. How sad that you can’t imagine that not every child is as strong and brave and true and perfect as you.
Unless, could it be the false bravado of a weakling? Unable to face the reality that you may not be so brave and strong and perfect so you build a BS wall around you of macho tough guy talk? Given how hard you protest I bet that is more likely – why else would you have joined the Navy instead of a real fighting force?
Graham Spanier fits that profile; he had a history of power abuse before arriving at Penn State. He had long been a careerist. Google “Spanier at Oregon State University” or “Spanier corruption.”
Read more: http://ideas.time.com/2012/07/17/penn-state-cover-up-group-think-in-action/#ixzz21JMLWJql
Matt Johnson: What makes you think I think you are nice?
What happens when the odds are good, but the goods are odd? Move to Alaska.
Was that too much?
Malisha,
Nobody ever did anything to me. I would have killed them. I’m not as nice as you think I am.
Matt Johnson, but your experience occurred when you were an adult and the petty officer was a relative stranger to you and the act he used in his inane vulgarity was one that you recognized as an act you would decide not to participate in. All these characteristics and your own grown-personhood make the scene you describe, while disgusting and offensive, NOT ANALOGOUS to the scene that was presented to any victims of child sexual abuse.
Kids abused by someone who is an authority figure, especially a male authority figure to kids who have some issues in their past with either authority figures (have ended up in the tender mercies of Second Mile) or inadequate or abusive parents, would not have the ability to see the situation the way you did, i.e., “This is abuse and I won’t take it.”
The problem is usually that NOT ONLY the victim-kids see the perps as authority figures, but those who thereafter cover it up.
Cover-ups never work to cover up the crimes of the powerless. THEY ONLY WORK to cover up the crimes of the powerful. And that is WHY they work.
Frankly 1, July 21, 2012 at 5:36 pm
I do not hope they are victims of sexual abuse themselves but I’d like to think they would fear that possibility so that they might learn empathy for the children abused.
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I never suffered that abuse. They wouldn’t have the appendage left.
Shall we talk reality? Probably not. What do you think your empathy amounts to? Nothing. When I was in Navy boot camp, one of the Senior Chief Petty Officers told me your a** s*ck* butt*rm*lick, recruit. I said, no it doesn’t. Do you know would have would have happened to him if he tried to prove it?
mespo – no problem, I have a civility problem when it comes to a handful of topics and sexual abuse is high on that list. I think many of these guys (and they were all guys in this case, right?) should go to prison (unlike some sadist I do not hope they are victims of sexual abuse themselves but I’d like to think they would fear that possibility so that they might learn empathy for the children abused because of their behavior). But after the legal consequences they thing these bustards care about most is money so my penalty would hurt them while helping the victims. It would be real justice
Following……
“Our notions of exceptionalism allow us to sprinkle holy water on our denial mechanisms.”
Dredd, What a sentence. I believe the content is a human failing visited on us all, I know it is true for me. Thank you for it.
I wonder if this concept is the main precept for unchecked and rising Egos, a continued billowing of self aggrandizement, and ultimately the need for lawyers to prove in court, the righteousness and purity of Mr. or Ms. perfect.
I have no huge salary nor social position to protect, and I seek neither, therefore when I am confronted with failings, that are at times true, it is much easier for me to correct them, for my judgement of myself is based solely on my sincerity and desire to stay so. I do not have to defend a false principle for others to insure my status as a paragon of exceptionalism.
Simple things, truly and well done are rewarding. Something I believe that is rock solid true (to me) Most everything is simple, it is we humans that choose to make things complicated.
bettykath,
if they want to play football, okay. The military academies have football teams. They usually don’t win because that isn’t the focus.
http://movies.about.com/od/fridaynightlights/a/nightbt100604.htm