[Husker] What about McQuery?

Aaron Wolfson awolfson0 at gmail.com
Mon Jul 16 21:01:19 CDT 2012


It should be clear from Scott's post that none of us have any business
speculating about why McQueary didn't go to the police, nor can we state
with certainty that we would have acted differently.

Aaron Wolfson


On Fri, Jul 13, 2012 at 10:13 PM, Andrew Smith <arossman at earthlink.net>wrote:

> I'd agree with your points if this was equivalent to exposing an employer
> who passes of sugar water as apple juice (i.e., whistle-blowing and a
> lesser crime), but it's neither.
>
> We're not talking about passing off sugar water as apple juice - we're
> talking about rape of a child. And whistle blowing is when you report
> illegal or unethical conduct by and approved of within an organization you
> work for.  So though I understand the similarities, we are not really
> talking about whistle-blowing unless one believes child rape was approved
> of by the PSU organization - we are talking about an individual, not an
> organization, raping a child.  I don't see where thinking that the police
> would come in and "clean house" is relevant unless again, one believes
> child rape was part of the PSU organization.
>
> I agree that in some cases (not this one) reporting a crime is not always
> easy.  One point of my "what have we learned?" letter is that how society
> discusses crimes, can negatively affect how people respond to them.
>
> I do not believe the whistle-blower related fears you mention are the
> reasons McQuery did not contact the police.  As a graduate assistant
> informing on a defensive coordinator, he was already risking repercussions.
>  I believe McQuery did not contact the police because he viewed Sandusky as
> part of the football program, then the university, and then society. As a
> result, he treated a heinous crime against society as though it was merely
> a crime against the football program.
>
> Andy
>
>
>
> On 7/12/2012 10:10 PM, Smith, William wrote:
>
>> Whistle-blowing, reporting illegal or unethical conduct to outside
>> authorities, is one of the riskiest moves any employee can undertake.
>> There are countless examples (my favorite is Jerome LiCari, the scientist
>> at Beech-Nut who discovered his employer was passing off sugar water as
>> apple juice) where someone has seen, could even prove, that criminal
>> activity was taking place in an organization, yet when the cat is out of
>> the bag, it is the whistleblower that quickly becomes the target of the
>> investigation.  What exactly do you know?  How long did you know it?  What
>> proof do you have?  Why didn't you report your suspicions earlier?  What
>> are you personal motives in coming forward at this time?  What
>> transgressions might you be hiding?  Even when the whistle-blower can
>> prove his/her case, future employability in the industry will be seriously
>> compromised.
>>
>> Further, even though it's tempting to think the police, the IRS, SEC, EPA,
>> FDA, highway patrol, whoever will come in and "clean house", there's no
>> guarantee of such.  Who's to say they are always on the side of right and
>> good?  In some instances aren't they in bed with the accused, part of a
>> sophisticated network of enablers?  (I'm going out on a huge limb here,
>> but I'll wager the Central Pennsylvania police, especially with no
>> corroborating evidence early on, are going to tread very very carefully
>> when it comes to matters involving "allegations" against the Penn State
>> athletic program.  That is, they will actually be inclined to be part of
>> the "damage control" response.)
>>
>> I admit I know very little about this case (what the media wants to tell
>> me, and that is always open to suspicion), but it makes a lot of sense why
>> Michael McQuery did not go to the police.  It seems sickenly indifferent
>> in retrospect, but there are very good reasons why modern organizations
>> demand, and almost always get, loyalty from their employees.
>>
>> Bill Smith
>> Towson, MD
>>
>> On 7/12/12 9:25 PM, "Andrew Smith" <arossman at earthlink.net> wrote:
>>
>>  ... this was a conspiracy among the president, vice-president,
>>>> athletic director, and head football coach to 1. cover up the crimes
>>>> of a child molester, and 2. allow the child molester to continue to
>>>> molest children for 14 years.
>>>>
>>> What I've never understood (actually, I understand why but disagree with
>>> it) is the treatment of Mike McQuery compared to Paterno, Curley, etc.
>>> McQuery is the one who actually witnessed a rape, yet it seems did not
>>> contact the police and then when no action was taken against Sandusky,
>>> did nothing for several years.
>>>
>>>
>>> And below are my thoughts in response to an article which suggested this
>>> was a sports problem and asked "what have we learned?".
>>>
>>> The problem is that society (including the media) sees college athletes
>>> and coaches as members of a team first, then the university, and only
>>> then as a member of society. When crimes are discovered, the first
>>> question raised is "what did the coach do?", followed by "what did the
>>> university do?", and much later if at all "what did the police do?". It
>>> should be no surprise then that people do not go to the police when they
>>> should.
>>>
>>> For example, in the Sandusky case more blame for not calling the police
>>> is placed on those who were told of Sandusky's behavior (Joe Paterno and
>>> his bosses) than on the person who actually witnessed them (Mike
>>> McQuery) simply because they are higher in the athletic chain-of command.
>>>
>>> This is not just a sports problem. We saw a similar tragedy in how
>>> abusive priests were handled. Society encourages people to decide whom
>>> to inform, not based on the nature of the crime, but on the group to
>>> which a perpetrator belongs.
>>>
>>> The lesson we should learn is simple ­ let the nature of the crime guide
>>> who you inform, not the perpetrator¹s membership. If you suspect someone
>>> of abusing children, you do not go to the coach, church, or anywhere
>>> other than the police.
>>>
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>>
>>
>
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