Archive for November 30, 2011

Legal NewsNew Sex Abuse Suit Claims Sandusky Threatened Boy’s Family If He Told

Attorneys representing a 29-year-old man says he was abused from 1992 to 1994 by Sandusky during a press conference, Nov. 30, 2011.

The latest person to accuse former Penn State coach Jerry Sandusky of sexual abuse also claims that Sandusky threatened to hurt the boy’s family if he ever told anyone about the abuse.

Sandusky’s newest accuser, who is now 29, had not told anyone about the abuse until he read about the grand jury presentment charging Sandusky with 40 counts of child molestation over 15 years, his lawyer Jeff Anderson said today. Until that time, he had thought he was the only victim.

The man, whose identity was not released, issued a statement that said, “I don’t want other kids to be abused by Jerry Sandusky or anybody like Penn State to allow people like him to do it-rape kids! I never told anybody what he did to me over 100 times at all kinds of places until the newspapers reported that he had abused other kids.”

“I am hurting and have been for a long time because of what happened, but feel now even more tormented that I have learned of so many other kids were abused after me,” he said.
Recomended Lawyers For Penn State Abuse Scandal: Read The Full Story

Philadelphia Attorneys – Flager Yockey
Call (215) 953-5200 or 1-888-470-1099.
One Northbrook Corporate Center
1210 Northbrook Drive, Ste. 280
Trevose, PA 19053

Wilkes-Barre Lawyers Metzger Wickersham has offices on Front Street in Harrisburg, on West King Street in Shippensburg, on West Liberty Street in Lancaster, on East Market Street in York, and at our newest location, on Kidder Street in Wilkes-Barre.
Phone: 1-800-WIN-WIN-1 (1-800-946-9461)
Fax: (717) 234-9478
3211 North Front Street
Harrisburg, PA 17110
(717) 238-8187
Local toll: 800-946-9461
National toll: 877-777-1529
Fax: (717) 234-9478

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Law News First lawsuit filed against Penn State coach in sex scandal

PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) – A new accuser against former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky said Sandusky sexually abused him “over 100 times” as a child.

The handwritten statement by a man, now 29, identified only as “John Doe A” accompanied a lawsuit filed on Wednesday in Philadelphia Common Pleas Court against Sandusky, Penn State University and The Second Mile, a charity founded by Sandusky to help troubled children.

Although the accuser is the ninth to emerge against Sandusky in relation to accusations of abuse, the lawsuit is the first to be filed in the scandal that has rocked the world of multimillion dollar college athletics.

(Reporting by Dave Warner; Editing by Barbara Goldberg and Jerry Norton)

Read The Full Story

Recomended Lawyers For Penn State Abuse Scandal:

Philadelphia Lawyers – Flager Yockey
Call (215) 953-5200 or 1-888-470-1099.
One Northbrook Corporate Center
1210 Northbrook Drive, Ste. 280
Trevose, PA 19053

Wilkes-Barre Lawyers Metzger Wickersham has offices on Front Street in Harrisburg, on West King Street in Shippensburg, on West Liberty Street in Lancaster, on East Market Street in York, and at our newest location, on Kidder Street in Wilkes-Barre.
Phone: 1-800-WIN-WIN-1 (1-800-946-9461)
Fax: (717) 234-9478
3211 North Front Street
Harrisburg, PA 17110
(717) 238-8187
Local toll: 800-946-9461
National toll: 877-777-1529
Fax: (717) 234-9478

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Law News Los angeles Lawyer Reacts To Alarming Study About Teen Car Accidents

Teenagers have the highest car accident rate of any group in the United States, and a recent study reveals just how dangerous new teenager drivers can be.

Los Angeles car accident lawyer Mickey Fine urges parents of teen drivers to take note of a study by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety. Researchers found that teen drivers are about 50 percent more likely to crash in the first month of driving than they are after a full year of experience driving on their own. Furthermore, the young drivers are nearly twice as likely to become involved in an auto accident as they are after two full years of experience, according to the study.

A related AAA Foundation study used in-vehicle cameras to monitor teens when they were learning to drive with their parents. Some of the teens were caught texting behind the wheel, engaging in horseplay with passengers, running red lights, and other potentially distracting or dangerous behaviors.

The AAA Foundation recommends the following steps for new teen drivers:

Practice driving after receiving the license to ensure the basic skills are mastered.
Limit the number of passengers in the car to avoid distractions.
Limit night driving, when the reduced visibility makes for riskier driving for people of all ages.
Set rules extending beyond the state laws, such as possibly limiting highway or city driving or barring the teen from driving in inclement weather.

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