Kib,
Talking with those in State College. There is still great skepticism that Joe in anyway brought any influence to bear in the situation other than a possible, "Just make sure you get it right."
We needn't jump to conclusions (sounds reckless, eh?) one way or the other. Nor, in seeking the truth, should we circle the wagons around the sainted memory of Joe Paterno.
I was a big fan of the man throughout his long career, and a big fan of the PSU football program, second only to my family-based allegiance to Ohio State. I still think highly of him.
But it's fair to draw inferences from the Curley email. He and Schultz had just agreed on Schultz's three part plan, the third part of which was to go to the outside authorities.
Curley,
after thinking about it and talking to Joe, said that on second thought, he wasn't comfortable with the three-part plan and suggested a two part plan, leaving out the third step of going to the authorities.
Spanier then said he was supportive of the two-part plan while acknowledging a risk to the participants in this decision (I nearly think of them as conspirators) if a good-talking-to and a promise to get counseling didn't stop Sandusky. I interpret this as awareness of a legal risk.
With due respect to the fallacy of
quid hoc ergo propter hoc, I think Curley's statement that he changed his mind after talking with Joe creates a logical inference that JoePa didn't like the third step. It would be entirely consistent with his professional lifetime of devotion to the reputation of his program, and perhaps with compassion due to his longstanding close association with Sandusky.
Seems to me the counter-speculation of JoePa defenders that Curley was basically inventing JoePa's support for his own wish to ditch the third step (which he'd previously agreed to) is the stretch. Fact is, Curley did an about-face and chose to mention that his change of attitude came after (a) further thinking, and (b) talking with Joe.
People around State College with whom you talk, Ice, have spent a long time admiring Joe Paterno. Of course they would be skeptical about anything that runs counter to their long-held opinions of the man.
But I agree with Kib on this point. We're here in part to speculate based on the information we're given. The interpretation that JoePa played an influential (and I don't rule out decisive) role in eliminating the third step flows rather naturally from the email evidence, from our knowledge of his stature in the PSU hierarchy, and from his longstanding devotion to promoting and preserving the reputation and image of his program.
What I don't follow is Kib's suggestion that NCAA action is appropriate. Seems to me this is a criminal matter all the way, with important legal implications to the reporting statutes and the internal procedures of institutions that need to protect the kids that are under their care or come on their premises or into contact with their employees. I don't see how it's a failing in relation to NCAA rules, but I haven't tried to make the case one way or another by looking at the more generally expressed rules about running things in an up-and-up way.