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Ex-Penn State president charged in Jerry Sandusky case

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Pennsylvania Attorney General Linda Kelly announces charges against former Penn State president Graham Spanier and additional charges against former vice president Gary Schultz and athletic director Tim Curley during a news conference at the Pennsylvania State Capitol Building in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania on Thursday, November 1, 2012. (Photo by Christopher Weddle/Center Daily Times/MCT)

(MCT) — HARRISBURG, Pa. — When it really counted, three top leaders at Penn State University engaged in a “conspiracy of silence” to cover up child sex-abuse allegations against retired assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky.

Those were the words Pennsylvania Attorney General Linda Kelly used Thursday as she made the announcement Nittany Nation had been expecting for months: that former Penn State President Graham Spanier has been charged in the Sandusky scandal.

“This was not a mistake. This was not an oversight. This was not misjudgment,” Kelly said during a news conference at the state Capitol.

“This was a conspiracy of silence.”

Spanier, 64, of State College, has been charged with one count of perjury, two counts of endangering the welfare of children and two counts of criminal conspiracy, all third-degree felonies punishable by up to seven years in prison and $15,000 in fines.

He is also charged with one count of obstruction of justice and one count of criminal conspiracy, second-degree misdemeanors, and a summary count of failure to report suspected child abuse.

University Athletic Director Tim Curley, 58, and retired Vice President Gary Schultz, 63, were charged with new offenses.

They are: two counts of endangering the welfare of children and two counts of criminal conspiracy. Both are third-degree felonies. They were also charged with one count of obstruction of justice and one count of criminal conspiracy, both second-degree misdemeanors.

Curley and Schultz already faced charges of perjury and failure to report child abuse. Their arraignment on the new charges is scheduled for Friday before District Judge William Wenner in Harrisburg.

Spanier, who was forced out after 16 years as Penn State's president shortly after Sandusky's arrest last November, is to be arraigned in the same court Wednesday.

In a statement, Spanier's attorneys dismissed the charges as a “farce” and accused Gov. Tom Corbett, who initiated the Sandusky probe while serving as attorney general from 2004 to 2010, of allowing Sandusky to walk free for three years before his arrest.

“These charges are the work of a vindictive and politically motivated governor working through an un-elected attorney general, Linda Kelly, whom he appointed to do his bidding and who will be a lame duck five days from now,” the statement jointly attributed to lawyers Timothy K. Harris, Elizabeth Ainslie and Peter F. Vaira reads.

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