Task force to oversee PSU fine
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- A 10-member task force has been named to come up with guidelines for how to distribute the record $60 million fine that Penn State has agreed to pay in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky scandal, the NCAA said Tuesday.
Penn State Scandal
Former Penn State assistant coach Jerry Sandusky was found guilty on 45 of 48 counts in his child sex abuse trial. ESPN.com Topics has full coverage of the trial and the verdict. Topics Page »
The money will fund programs designed to combat child sexual abuse and help victims around the country. The task force will set policy and hire a third-party administrator who will choose which nonprofit groups receive the money each year.
Prominent Pennsylvania politicians including Republican Gov. Tom Corbett and House Democratic Leader Frank Dermody want the NCAA to keep all the funds in state.
The NCAA imposed tough sanctions on Penn State over its handling of sex-abuse allegations against Sandusky, a retired assistant football coach convicted of abusing 10 boys over 15 years.
The governing body acted swiftly following a school-sanctioned report by former FBI Director Louis Freeh that accused coach Joe Paterno and three top officials of hiding child sexual abuse allegations against Sandusky to protect the school and its powerful football program.
Paterno died in January at age 85. His family and the other school officials have all vehemently denied Freeh's allegations.
But the NCAA levied a four-year postseason ban, significant scholarship cuts and other sanctions to punish Penn State over its failure to report a serial child predator to authorities.
Penn State also agreed to pay $12 million a year for the next five years into an endowment to fund programs for the detection, prevention and treatment of child abuse.
Members of the NCAA task force include administrators from Penn State and other NCAA member schools; nonprofit executives including United Way Worldwide CEO Brian Gallagher; and a representative of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press
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NEWS
- Spanier's lawyer blasts Freeh report »
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COMMENTARY
- MacGregor: Where's the reconciliation? »
- Haney: Will PSU suffer SMU's fate?

- Schlabach: O'Brien's Penn State plan »
- Maisel: Sanctions don't scare O'Brien »
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- Keown: NCAA missed on solution »
- Wojciechowski: Culture of deceit »
- Maisel: Hoping intentions don't get lost »
- Schlabach: All quiet in State College »
- Shanker: Where PSU recruiting stands

- Van Natta: Unprecedented in every way »
- Rittenberg: Scholarship penalties crushing »
- Sherman: Recruiting impact is huge »
- O'Connor: College football's No. 1 fraud »
- Rittenberg: Statue removal right call »
- Reilly: Regretting his role in myth-building »
VIDEO
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- OTL: Weight of sanctions

- PSU brass responds to ruling

- OTL: Spanier critical of Freeh report

- Luginbill: Recruiting impact

- Fowler: Devastating blow to PSU

- Howard: No problem with sanctions

- Holtz: NCAA sends message

- Paterno statue removed Sunday

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AUDIO
- Musburger: NCAA went too far

- Former FSU coach Bobby Bowden

- ESPN analyst Bobby Knight

- Board of Trustees member Lubrano

- ESPN analyst Kirk Herbstreit

- Fowler on PSU sanctions

- Former Penn State DT Brandon Noble

- StateCollege.com's Ben Jones

- Trevor Matich: NCAA went too far

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