Category: Vita activa

Why Joe had to go

With great power comes great responsibility.

— Uncle Ben to Peter Parker

We know approximately what then-graduate assistant Mike McQueary told Penn State head football coach Joe Paterno when he came to Paterno’s house the morning after witnessing the rape of a ten-year-old boy in the football locker room shower. That’s pretty much summarized in the grand jury presentment charging retired assistant coach Jerry Sandusky with that rape and 39 other counts of sex crimes. (You can read the presentment here; be warned, however: it is one of the most sickening documents I’ve ever read.)

What I’d like to know is what Paterno said to McQueary.

There’s one thing I’m sure he did not say. He did not say, “Mike, you have to go to the police about this. Right now. Don’t even think about possible consequences to yourself. I’ve got your back on this. I’ll protect you from the athletic department, I’ll protect you from the administration. But you’ve got to report this.”

How do I know Paterno didn’t say this? Because if he had, McQueary would have gone right to the police. He would not have waited until he was subpoened by a grand jury nine years later. Read more »

Say it ain’t so, Lance!

Floyd Landis, the American cyclist who was stripped of his 2006 Tour de France victory after failing a urine test, has accused his former teammate, cycling legend and seven-time Tour winner Lance Armstrong, of blood doping. According to yesterday’s Wall Street Journal, Landis, who has long denied the use of performance-enhancers, admitted to blood doping in a series of emails to his sponsors and USA Cycling. The emails also implicated Armstrong and other top U. S. cyclists.

Armstrong was told of the allegations while competing in the Tour of California. He immediately called a press conference to deny the charges — and then went out and crashed his bike, which forced him to abandon the race.

This was not the first time Armstrong has had to deal with doping charges, and it was not the first press conference he has held to deny them.

The question remains, though: did he do it? Read more »