In my opinion

NCAA’s Penn State punishment fits the crime, offers relief

 
 

NCAA President Mark Emmert gestures during a news conference in Indianapolis, Monday, July 23, 2012. The NCAA has slammed Penn State with an unprecedented series of penalties, 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.
NCAA President Mark Emmert gestures during a news conference in Indianapolis, Monday, July 23, 2012. The NCAA has slammed Penn State with an unprecedented series of penalties, 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.
Michael Conroy / AP

gcote@MiamiHerald.com

There was an almost visceral satisfaction in hearing the NCAA president on Monday recite the severe punishment against Penn State and its shamed football program over the Jerry Sandusky pedophile scandal.

I suppose I’ll feel something similar when I hear a jury’s guilty verdict in the movie theater massacre in Aurora, Colo.

Justice makes us feel better by feeding our hunger for vengeance when the crimes are so incomprehensible that the senses reel and the skin crawls. Not a victim has been saved by justice, but we hope Monday’s penalties might bring a measure of relief to Sandusky’s victims in much the same way we hope eventual justice will be a step toward closure for families in Colorado burying loved ones.

It took mass murder to trump Sandusky on the 2012 scale of what heinous is, but the NCAA has left little doubt how seriously it regards a prominent assistant football coach sexually abusing young boys year after year — some on campus, in the team shower — while top university officials including iconic coach Joe Paterno looked the other way.

Some spoke of Penn State football deserving the “death penalty,” a temporary abolishment of the program.

What Penn State got was worse, more long-lasting, unprecedented.

Sandusky, 68, guilty of 45 counts and facing up to 468 years in prison at sentencing, likely will die in prison before his former Nittany Lions fully recover from the sanctions he caused.

A four-season bowl ban, the longest the NCAA has imposed since 1960.

A reduction of 80 football scholarships over four years.

Current players, all freed to transfer elsewhere and play immediately.

A $60 million fine for the university.

Five years of probation.

And every Penn State football victory from 1998 through last season — 112 wins during the past 14 seasons — all are vacated. Erased. (Meaning retired Bobby Bowden is now tops in Football Bowl Subdivision wins again as JoePa is toppled.)

NCAA president Mark Emmert called what happened at Penn State “tragic damage” and called the sanctions “greater than any seen in NCAA history.”

The Big Ten Conference has added its own penalties, imposing four years of lost bowl revenue-sharing that amounts to another $13 million hit for Penn State.

For the victims

This is for Sandusky’s victims, especially for the ones who would have been spared if — as determined by the independent Freeh Report — either Paterno, or then-school president Graham Spanier, or then-athletic director Tim Cooley, or then-school vice president Gary Schultz, had done his job and aggressively pursued indications that Sandusky was up to his shocking no good.

This is also a statement against the culture that places winning above all else, even the safety of children.

The family of the late Paterno understandably fights to save his damaged name and legacy, but that fight is as hopeless as Sandusky still maintaining his innocence in the face of such overwhelming testimony by victims. The school on Sunday removed the statue of Paterno that had stood in front of the football stadium, a blue blanket cloaked over JoePa’s bronzed head, that “we’re No. 1” index finger still raised high.

Taking down the statue was right.

So were Monday’s severe sanctions.

The NCAA hits hardest when there is evidence of a lack of “institutional control.” That usually involves more standard rules breaking, such as improper benefits given to players or recruits. In Penn State’s case that lack of institutional control enabled crimes and shattered young lives. For years.

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