Swag Of The Month Raises $100K to Subscribe Men to Indie Fashion

photo (78)

Swag. Short for “Swagger”, is what rappers and the youth of today call style. And now you can get it delivered to your door. Swag Of The Month is a new $9 subscription service that lets men receive t-shirts and other clothing items that match their preferences from independent fashion designers. Today it raised a $100,000 Angel round from Quattro Development to legitimize the previously bootstrapped business. Dressing cool is about to get easier.

The subscription fashion model has taken off amongst women. ShoeDazzle has raised a baller $60 million from investors including Andressen Horowitz, Polaris, and Lightspeed. BeachMint is rumored to have been valued at $150 million when it raised $23.5 million in June, and its site BeautyMint got 500,000 visitors its first day.

The concept of disconnecting fashion from actually shopping is also gaining steam with men. Trunk Club raised $11 million in September for its high-end service where men pay retail prices for fancy $48 polo shirts picked out by Skyped-in fashion consultants. If low-end, long-tail men’s subscription fashion can become anywhere near as popular as these services, Swag Of The Month’s angels are going to feel pretty damn smart.

The ShoeDazzle and BeachMint model doesn’t seem broken, so Swag Of The Month’s founders Erik Huberman and Austin Smith didn’t  fix it. Subscribers fill out a style preference survey, pay the fee, and are guaranteed a cool piece of clothing in the mail each month. Shirt not as swag as you hoped? Return it for a different one. The service launched last month on pocket change and now has 300 paying customers.

Retailers give Swag Of The Month their clothes for free as an alternative form of marketing. Huberman explains that getting your clothes worn is a much better strategy for a fledgling designer to gain exposure than buying ads for a label no one’s heard of. The supply of designers is plentiful around Swag Of The Month’s Santa Monica, LA office, and subscriber fees go towards shipping costs.

I frequently talk to men who want to dress better but dread visiting stores, trying things on, and spending a lot. Swag Of The Month makes men look cool with none of the work and at a fraction of the price. I mean, seriously, you can’t get a cool t-shirt for $9 anywhere, and sometimes the service mails out jeans or winter wear at no extra cost. T-shirts are light, but Swag Of The Month will still have to streamline fulfillment eventually to boost margins. For now, the $100K will go towards day-to-day operations, marketing, web development, and designer partnerships.

I’m a big believer that successful women’s lifestyle startups can be dumbed down and repurposed for men. For example, Where Is The Cool whittles Pinterest down to just a home page, and I think Swag Of The Month has much bigger potential. If it can keep the preference survey breezy, men won’t think twice about paying $9 a month to say, “This right here is my Pretty Boy Swag.”

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/16/swag-of-the-month/

Share

Which Daily Deal Site Are You? This Flow Chart May Have The Answer.

you

The daily deals space continues to morph with each passing month, and we all have our fingers crossed that it is indeed maturing. (Even though some would prefer to see the space vanish altogether before that happens.)

With few barriers to entry, everyone and their mother is launching a daily deals site these days. For example: Yipit releases a sometimes-monthly report on the movement and flux in the space, and this report collects data from more than 650 deals sites. Yep, over 650. Of course, the total number of deal sites fluctuates each month, as in July, for example,38 deals sites closed their doors — compared to 36 new sites launched. (You can check out the August report here.)

There’s also consolidation happening in the space, as the troubled BuyWithMe (which has been vying for the rank of third largest deals site with Gilt City, Travelzoo and Bloomspot) is rumored as an acquisition target for Gilt Groupe — and the company itself acquired its sixth company in September. Groupon continues to lead the space, with its recent IPO and current $15 billion market cap.

Earlier this month, we covered a new deal aggregator and deal map entering the space called “deel.io”, which was founded by former Google engineers and one of the early engineers at HarvardConnection (later known as ConnectU), which was founded by the Winklevosses and Divya Narendra in 2002.

The young startup has since changed its name to “The Dealmix”, but its mission remains the same: Recognizing that the deals space has become chaotic, “almost to a point of annoyance”, they said, The Dealmix is trying to bring a bit of organization and simplicity to the wild and woolly deal market.

In spite of the chaos, the founders think that daily deals still have significant inherent value, and they want everyone to get the most out of deals, so the team put together this infographic which seeks to answer the question, “what daily deals site are you?” They’ve included some of the space’s most recognizable players with an easy flow chart to help you discover the right site for you. Because we know that you NEED to know.

Check it out below, and chime in with your suggestions.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/16/which-daily-deal-site-are-you-this-flow-chart-may-have-the-answer/

Share

Another Member Of The Twitter Comms Team Leaves. So What’s Going On At Twitter?

Screen Shot 2011-11-16 at 7.51.04 PM

Twitter Communication exec Sean Garrett’s departure from the company last week was a shock to many in the press who had the pleasure of dealing with him and the Twitter Communications Team. Garrett loved and presumably still loves Twitter, as anyone who follows him on there knows.

That’s why I was doubly shocked when I heard the news this afternoon that new Twitter Communications Director Lynn Fox had left the company. Fox, who I also follow on Twitter, had only been at Twitter for four months!

So what’s going on? Well according to multiple sources, the departure of Marketing head Pam Kramer six weeks ago has resulted in Twitter’s Jack Dorsey basically replacing her as head of Marketing and amping up his influence within the company. (Yes he really does work those 8 hours at Twitter, now all I’ve got to do is confirm the 8 hours with Square).

Dorsey stepping it up, coupled with Dick Costolo’s heavy Operations hand has led to a conflict in many staff members eyes, “Which master do we follow?” And confusion.

According to one source, this “Do I do what Dick says or do I do what Jack says?” dilemma has put extra special strain on the Twitter Communications team, which seemingly doesn’t know whose message they should be communicating. Others say that its Jack’s Jobsian management approach that has led to the frustration among staff in all departments.

Whether they’re on Team Dick or on Team Jack (or Team Biz and Ev), the fact remains that everyone is still rooting for Twitter to get past the growing pains of its adolescence and flourish in adulthood. Just think about it, how much has the thing improved your life.?

Google pro Karen Wickre was brought on to the Communications team just a few weeks ago and is now interim head as they search for a replacement for Garrett and now Fox.  In my humble opinion, the group of now eight is the best technology PR team in the business — not a surprise when you consider the product they represent.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/16/another-member-of-the-twitter-comms-team-leaves-so-whats-going-on-at-twitter/

Share

Now a Soap Opera, Heavily-Backed SOPA Copyright Bill Gets New Bipartisan and Popular Opposition

mozilla-logo-censored

The “Stop Online Piracy Act” (SOPA) had looked set for a quick and quiet passing through the House after it was introduced late last month. A string of Democrats and Republicans, and various big-media affiliated interest groups had lined up behind it, while the internet had mostly stayed on the sidelines. But a major outcry this week — and especially today — could change that.

The bill, which has been presented by its supporters as a bipartisan effort to punish “rogue” infringing sites, is now being questioned by members of both parties for the potential damage it could also do to innovation. That’s on top of a concerted effort by major web companies to communicate their opposition, via their own sites and an open letter to Congress yesterday (that’s being run as a full-page ad in The New York Times).

Popular opposition has continued to mount, led by web services and various advocacy groups under the banner of American Censorship Day. Among other efforts, Tumblr censored user dashboards to show what users might not be able to publish under SOPA, and Mozilla and a range of publications put “stop censorship” banners across their logos.

Among numerous other issues, SOPA and its Senate counterpart, the PROTECT IP Act, would allow copyright holders to easily obtain court orders to stop US payment and ad providers from doing business with foreign sites, force search engines to block links to allegedly infringing sites, and require domain service providers to block domains of allegedly infringing sites from being accessible. Be sure to check out Devin Coldewey’s excellent teardown of SOPA and PROTECT IP for more details on why we and many (but not all) other internet users are opposed.

Six witnesses, mostly hand-picked supporters of the bill, spoke before the House Judiciary Committee today in a 3.5 hour session that ended up revealing confusion and disagreement among the committee members and their peers.

Google, the lone witness fully opposing the bill, was characterized by chairman and bill sponsor Lamar Smith (R-Texas) and others as being pro-piracy. But a top colleague, Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), responded to the hearing by shooting down the bipartisan consensus theme.

“What [lawmakers are] realizing is there are so many unintended consequences that they can’t just use Google as a piñata and bash on it here,” he told The Hill. ”I don’t believe this bill has any chance on the House floor. I think it’s way too extreme, it infringes on too many areas that our leadership will know is simply too dangerous to do in its current form.”

Later in the day, he tweeted that he’s working on a separate plan designed to combat copyright infringement:

That solution, as he had sketched out in a press conference Tuesday together with Representative Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.), would be to create a complaint process for copyright infringement similar to the International Trade Commission’s patent infringement investigation system.

More cracks also started to appear among the bill’s proponents. Rep. Dan Lungren, who heads the Homeland Security subcommittee on cybersecurity, said at the hearing that SOPA and PROTECT IP “undercut the real effort that would practically help us secure the Internet” through Domain Name System Security Extensions. DNSSEC provide a set of authentication extensions to the internet’s domain name system, so web sites can certify that they are who they say they are. According to security experts, the technology would be broken if SOPA required domain service providers to block domains.

Smith’s response to the issue was that “I’m not a technical expert on this,” followed by “I’m trying to ferret this out.” None of his panelists understood the issue either. It’s concerning that he hadn’t done this research before sponsoring the bill.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/16/soapopera/

Share

Facebook Updates Events, Makes “Not Attending” Less Insulting

New Events Finished 640

Rather than have no-shows convince others that your party will suck, Facebook has modified its Event pages to hide people who explicitly decline invitations. You can still find out who couldn’t just be cordial and leave the invitation pending by drilling into the renamed “Going”, “Maybe” and “Invited” categories. Facebook’s goal is likely to get more people accurately responding to invitations by making them feel less rude for declining.

Facebook also rolled out a few other refinements to Event pages tonight. If you do decline an invitation, you’ll be prompted to post why on the Event’s wall. This encourages the token invites people send to friends thousands of miles away. These token invites are viewed as needless distractions by some, though others think they are cute ways to remind people you’re thinking of them.

If someone won’t stop spamming you with invites, you can now block them from sending you them straight from the decline step rather than having to visit your privacy settings. [Update: Thanks to Facebook engineer for Events Bob Baldwin, who shared with us an official schematic outlining the changes. Seen below, the schematic notes that news feed stories about people attending or planning events are also now more concise.]

If you tag a Place as the location of an Event, Facebook will display a Bing map with a quick link to directions. By rewarding organizers with a map for tagging Events to Places, Facebook can build its location database with where people gather. It will also provide exposure to its maps partner Bing, which Facebook presumably wants to help steal market share from Google Maps.

Unfortunately, Facebook managed to mess up the most basic piece of Event functionality through the update. It’s now hard to tell whether you’re already set as attending or need to respond to an invite because the unclicked “Join” button (needlessly changed from “Attend”) is highlighted blue next to the gray Maybe and Decline buttons. This is absurd. Facebook may be trying to make it easy to find the most commonly pressed button on the page, but if all three buttons are unclicked, they should all be the same color.

Facebook Events are basic, and that works well. They’ve become popular through simplicity, and are on the product is on its way to becoming a backbone of planning offline gatherings. The intentions behind the changes seem sound, but Facebook needs to make it obvious whether I’ve already said I’m attending your sad last minute birthday party.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/16/events-changes/

Share

Android Global: South Korea Second Only To U.S. In App Downloads

Screen shot 2011-11-16 at 9.23.24 PM

Research firm research2guidance this morning published a report that offers key findings from an analysis of mobile app trends in the Android Market. The first point is perhaps not so surprising: Although we think of Android as having significant global reach as a mobile operating system, the U.S. remains (by far) the largest market for Android apps. According to the study, with over 3.49 billion total downloads as of September 2011 and with 50 percent of Android app downloads (to date) originating at home, the U.S. is dominating the Android app market.

However, the research firm is quick to point out that, although the U.S. leads, there is some saturation happening here, while other markets abroad have come to represent significant potential growth areas — and hotbeds of activity. In fact, (though this may not be news, it doesn’t seem to be widely covered in the U.S.), South Korea has the second largest market in terms of app downloads — even though it lags behind the U.S. with a small-ish 9 percent market share. In fact, to date, South Korea had the highest number of total app downloads after the U.S., at 603 million.

South Korea has relatively high Android smartphone penetration and a high number of app downloads (per user). According to research2guidance Co-founder Markus Pohl, South Korea’s growing share is supported by the country’s extensive IT infrastructure, which not only is known for its high speed and extensive coverage, but also for being fairly inexpensive, around $0.45 per Mbs compared to $11 in the U.K., for example. (South Korea is also home to major OEMs, like Samsung.)

South Korea is followed by the U.K., Germany, France, and Japan — all of which are currently tallying over 20 million downloads per month. And, what’s more, the study shows that users based in the largest Android markets are not always the most active app downloaders. User download behavior varies widely between markets, but it seems that potential “cash cow” markets are to be found in, perhaps, unexpected places.

Sweden, for example, has a relatively low market share (and low smartphone penetration) compared to the rest of the world, but it has the highest average monthly app downloads per user — at a rate of over 5 apps per user per month. This is compared to the average user in major Android markets, which downloads 2 to 3 applications per month.

Obviously, higher average downloads per user show the market’s rate of absorption and growth potential, as higher numbers can indicate the society’s openness towards new apps and the fact that total app downloads in these countries could increase with less marketing efforts compared to countries with less active users, Pohl said.

On the other hand, Russia and China have very low Android smartphone penetration rates and very low app downloads per user. Granted, while a much lower rate of downloads per user might show that these markets aren’t yet ready for Android apps to really take off, the relatively young target market and their population size could have significant impact on app market development in these countries, and Pohl sees them becoming huge Android adopters in the near future.

As to apps in the Android market seen as a whole, over the past few months, the report finds, the number of apps has grown “faster than ever”. Every week publishers are releasing 11,000 new apps to the market, compared to an average of 7,500 during the summer. At the end of October, for example, the number of total apps was 365,404 — a growth of over 40K total apps since Robin wrote about the market less than a month ago.

Of the total apps, the share of paid apps dropped to 32.4 percent, as “publishers are increasingly aware that Android users are unwilling to pay for downloads”, which is, in turn, catalyzing the adoption of in-app billing and advertising. Furthermore, in
 October
,
 developers
 charged
 an average of $3.06
 for
 paid
 apps, and prices ranged from $0.99 to $14.87.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/16/android-global-south-korea-second-only-to-u-s-in-app-downloads/

 

Share

Visa aims at developing countries with new international prepaid mobile payment service

Shortly after announcing its new digital wallet service V.me for developed markets, Visa also made a presence at Mobile Asia Congress in Hong Kong to promote its new prepaid mobile money platform aimed at the under-banked and the unbanked consumers. By utilizing its recently-acquired Fundamo (which currently has more than 10 million mobile payment subscribers), Visa aims to leverage on the vast number of mobile phone users in developing countries – many of whom are already using local but carrier-bound mobile payment systems — in order to offer a globally interoperable mobile payment network.

This overlaying platform is said to be more secure, much cheaper and more convenient than the likes of Western Union, especially when you can simply make mobile-to-mobile payments when sending money across countries. Nigeria and Uganda will be the first nations to get a taste of this early next year courtesy of telecommunications provider MTN Group, and eventually more developing countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America will join the list. Full press release after the break.

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/17/visa-aims-at-developing-countries-with-new-international-mobile/

Share

Sandusky Accuser Would Testify of Severe Sexual Assault, Lawyer Says

Ben Andreozzi, a Pennsylvania lawyer representing one of eight boys alleged to be victims in the Penn State sexual child abuse case, called Jerry Sandusky a “coward” on Wednesday and said that Sandusky’s recent comments on television had emboldened his client to pursue sexual assault charges against Sandusky.

“Mr. Sandusky suggested in some of his comments about the victims that maybe people were backing off,” Andreozzi said in a telephone interview from his office in Harrisburg. “My client heard that and has dug in his heels. He is feeling more comfortable about going through with this. The comments maybe backfired. They have caused victims to be more motivated to testify against him.”

Andreozzi said his client, now in his 20s, met Sandusky through Sandusky’s charity, the Second Mile. He said he had been around Sandusky for several years and was assaulted multiple times. Andreozzi has also advised other alleged victims in the case and said he was meeting with another potential victim this week.

Sandusky, a former Penn State assistant, has been charged with 40 counts related to sexual abuse of boys over a period of 15 years. He said he was innocent of all charges in a telephone interview with NBC’s Bob Costas on Monday. His lawyer, Joseph Amendola, indicated there were doubts about his accusers.

“They have other people who are saying they saw something, but they don’t have actual people saying, ‘This is what Jerry did to me,’ ” Amendola said. “We’re working to find those people, and when the time comes, and if we are able to do that, we think this whole case will change dramatically.”

Andreozzi, who also issued a statement Wednesday, said his client would testify that he was “severely sexually assaulted” by Sandusky.

“I am appalled by the fact that Mr. Sandusky has elected to revictimize these young men at a time when they should be healing,” Andreozzi said. “He’s being a coward by refusing to admit to his culpability. Sexual assault victims can begin the healing process if there’s an acknowledgment of fault. Mr. Sandusky could assist in that process and instead he is putting these young men through it again.”

Andreozzi said he had talked with his client after listening to Sandusky’s televised telephone interview. “He was absolutely more ready to follow through with this afterward,” Andreozzi said. “He wants him to know he fully intends to testify he was severely sexually assaulted by Mr. Sandusky.”

Andreozzi added: “I have my finger on the pulse of this case. I don’t know of any existing assault victims changing their story or refusing to testify. To the contrary, others are actually coming forward.”

Andreozzi, who has specialized in child sexual abuse cases, said he was upset that Penn State had not reached out to any of the victims.

“They could have a victim-centric approach to this but it appears they have been in a face-saving mode,” Andreozzi said. “They could be proactive and offer to pay for counseling and let the victims participate in the rebuilding of the school. They could help to adopt policies and procedures that will prevent sexual assaults on the campus.

“This is a situation that is only going to grow. When I represent a sexual abuse victim we start with one or maybe two clients, but as the ball gets rolling forward more victims almost always come forward.”

ACTING A.D. IS NAMED David M. Joyner, an orthopedic physician who has been a member of Penn State’s board of trustees since 2000, was named the university’s acting athletic director after Tim Curley took a leave of absence in the wake of the sexual abuse scandal that has engulfed the campus.

Mark Sherburne, who had been the interim athletic director, is returning to his role as associate athletic director.

Joyner, a former Nittany Lions football player and wrestler, has worked with the United States Olympic Committee; he was the head physician for the United States teams at the 1992 Winter Olympics. While he serves as the athletic director, Joyner will suspend his role on the board of trustees.

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/17/sports/ncaafootball/lawyer-says-client-will-testify-to-severe-sexual-assault-in-sandusky-case.html

Share

Two police departments say Penn State coach never filed report

State College, Pennsylvania (CNN) – Representatives of Penn State’s campus police and State College police said Wednesday they have no record of having received any report from a Penn State assistant football coach about his having witnessed an alleged rape of a boy by former coach Jerry Sandusky.

The police departments’ statements don’t corroborate those made in an e-mail from the assistant coach, Mike McQueary, who said he witnessed the alleged incident in a Penn State locker room in 2002.

Lisa M. Powers, a Penn State spokeswoman, told CNN that the university police has no record of any police report filed by McQueary. “Today was the first we have heard of this through the media,” Powers told CNN in an e-mail.

State College police also had no reports from McQueary, according to State College Police Chief Tom King. (State College is the town surrounding the university campus).

However, grand jury records indicate that McQueary did talk to Gary Schultz, who was then senior vice president for finance and business, and that Schultz never presented the information to university police. Schultz and Penn State Athletic Director Tim Curley and Gary Schultz are charged with lying to the grand jury.

But, in the e-mail obtained by The Morning Call newspaper of Allentown, Pennsylvania, McQueary said that he helped stop the assault and talked with police about it.

“I did stop it, not physically, but made sure it was stopped when I left that locker room,” McQueary wrote in the November 8 e-mail to a former classmate.

“No one can imagine my thoughts or wants to be in my shoes for those 30-45 seconds,” McQueary said. “Trust me.”

In his e-mail, McQueary also wrote that he “did have discussions with police and with the official at the university in charge of police” after the alleged incident involving Sandusky.

There are situations in law enforcement in which conversations with officers don’t result in official police reports, according to In Session legal contributor Sunny Hostin.

“Sometimes a tip is given to a sex crimes detective, notes are taken, the witness account is investigated but a report isn’t generated, especially if it is determined that no crime occurred,” Hostin told CNN. “Since we don’t know the circumstances surrounding McQueary’s alleged conversations with police, it is impossible to determine what happened. We also don’t know what the protocol is at the campus police department and the city police department.”

The alleged locker room rape witnessed by McQueary, who was then a graduate assistant, was detailed in a grand jury report released this month.

According to the report, McQueary told Joe Paterno, who was then the team’s coach; Paterno then alerted his boss, the school’s athletic director.

The scandal revolves around Sandusky, charged by Pennsylvania’s attorney general with 40 counts in what authorities allege was the sexual abuse of eight boys, and allegations that Penn State officials failed to inform police when the complaints reached them.

Timeline of the Penn State scandal

A source with knowledge of the investigation told CNN that the McQueary e-mail is not inconsistent with the grand jury presentment.

Sandusky is free on $100,000 bail, against the wishes of prosecutors.

The grand jury presentment is a summary of the proceedings, not a complete transcription. The grand jury report led to the firing last week of Paterno and Penn State President Graham Spanier. McQueary was put on administrative leave.

Read the grand jury findings in the case (PDF) [WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT]

The report says Sandusky molested young boys after developing close relationships with them through The Second Mile, a charity he founded for at-risk youths.

On Wednesday a new judge was assigned to the case against Sandusky in the wake of a controversy over the Centre County judge who had been on case. That judge — who freed Sandusky on $100,000 bail — had volunteered at Sandusky’s The Second Mile charity.

Her replacement in the case is Robert E. Scott, a senior judge of Westmoreland County, who will preside over Sandusky’s preliminary hearing on December 7.

Judge Scott “has no known connections with the Pennsylvania State University, the Second Mile charity, nor any officers or representatives of any of those entities,” according to the administrative office of Pennsylvania courts.

A spokeswoman for a nonprofit agency serving New York City children has informed authorities that the Sandusky family hosted at least one child from a low-income family during a summer vacation.

The Fresh Air Fund provides free summer vacations to New York City children from low-income communities; at least one child stayed in the Sandusky home in the mid-1990s, said spokeswoman Andrea Kotuk.

Five more children are thought to have stayed in the home during the 1970s, Kotuk said.

In a separate development, public records and legal notices show that Paterno, 84, transferred ownership of his family home to his wife, Sue, for $1 in July.

Paterno’s attorney, Wick Sollers, said in an e-mail that the transfer was “unrelated to and unaffected by the current situation. The Paternos have been engaged in a multi-year estate planning program and this was simply one element of that plan.”

Mark Lloyd, a certified estate planner in Atlanta, said the Tax Relief Act set the maximum gift that would not incur inheritance tax at $5 million, so splitting assets and utilizing trusts may be part of estate planning for a couple with an estate worth more than that amount.

CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin said he wasn’t drawing any conclusion about the transfer. “It’s hard to know what kind of advice the Paterno family received,” he said. “Frankly, it’s hard for me to imagine the transfer was done to avoid a possible civil judgment.”

The case has been slow to unfold in the public domain, at least in part because Penn State is exempt from Pennsylvania’s open records law, making it difficult to get information about who knew what and when regarding the sex-abuse claims.

Penn State and three other schools that receive state funds don’t fall under Pennsylvania’s Right to Know Law, according to Terry Mutchler, the executive director of the state’s Office of Open Records.

“If this were an investigation involving another university … that did have a scandal at its doorstep, they were subject to the Right to Know Law,” Mutchler told CNN.

“You were able to obtain, in that situation, e-mails, copies of incident reports at the police department, any kind of policies that came out with the Board of Trustees. That would all be available,” she said. “At Penn State, however, that’s off limits.”

In 2007, state lawmakers considered a change that would have included the school under the open records law. But then-President Spanier testified against the move before the House State Government Committee.

He told the legislature he was concerned about cost and compliance and that there were competitive reasons for keeping records private.

“Nobody would argue the point that the public has a right to know how public funds are spent,” Spanier said at the time. “But these proposals will fundamentally change the way we operate, the way our trustees govern and the way the university administers their policies.”

Preliminary hearings for Penn State Athletic Director Tim Curley and Gary Schultz, who has retired as senior vice president for finance and business, were set Wednesday for December 6 in Dauphin County Magistrate Court, before Magisterial Judge William C. Wenner. They are accused of lying to the grand jury.

Sandusky told NBC’s Bob Costas on Monday that he has been falsely accused, saying that he only “horsed around” with kids in the shower after workouts.

Sandusky denied being sexually attracted to boys, and his lawyer, Joe Amendola, told CNN on Monday night that showering with children does not equate automatically to sexual assault.

In the NBC interview, Sandusky denied one of the charges in the grand jury report — that McQueary had walked in on him raping a boy about 10 years of age.

The mother of one of Sandusky’s alleged victims — identified as Victim 1 in the indictment — told CNN on Wednesday that her son watched the NBC interview and cried. “I said, ‘Well, why did you cry?’ And he said, ‘Because I’m afraid that he might go free,’ ” said the woman, whose face and voice were altered to protect her — and by extension her son’s — identity.

She said she first got clues that something was wrong when her son’s behavior changed. “He went from like being a perfect 1,2,3 magic child to being ornery and being arrogant and mean,” she said. But when her son asked her to lie to Sandusky when he called the house, she became suspicious.

“Then, out of the blue, one day he was sitting at the computer and wanted to look up ‘sex weirdos.’ He asked me ‘What’s the website you get on to look them up?’ And I told him it was Megan’s Law. And he said, ‘Well, how do I type it in?’ So, I gave him the web address and he typed it into the computer and I said, ‘Who are you looking for?’ and he said ‘Jerry.’

“I kinda froze. I was like, wow. ‘What are you looking him up for?’ And he was like, ‘Oh, I don’t know. I just want to see if he’s on there.’ I said, ‘Well, why would he be on there? Do you have something you want to tell me?’ and he was like, ‘No.’”

Asked what was going on with Sandusky, the boy answered, “Sometimes he just acts weird. So I just wanted to see if he was on there, that’s all.’”

The mother said that, a few days afterward, she learned that Sandusky had been taking her son out of school without her permission, so she called school officials and asked them to talk to her son “and just ask him how he feels.”

Soon after, the principal called her back in tears and invited the boy’s mother to meet with her and the school guidance counselor, the mother said.

“They told me that my son had said some things about that there was a problem with Jerry,” she said. “He just said that he thought he needed to tell somebody or it would get worse.”

The mother said that, at that point, she asked the school officials to call the police. “They said I needed to think about the ramifications of what would happen if I did that,” she said.

Asked what they meant, the mother said, “I don’t know. I guess, I’m assuming what we’re going through right now.”

Asked what she would like to see, she said, “I want Jerry Sandusky to go to jail for the rest of his life.”

Sandusky was arrested on November 5, after the release of the grand jury report detailing crimes that he allegedly committed between 1994 and 2009.Representatives of Penn State’s campus police and State College police said Wednesday they have no record of having received any report from a Penn State assistant football coach about his having witnessed an alleged rape of a boy by former coach Jerry Sandusky.

The police departments’ statements don’t corroborate those made in an e-mail from the assistant coach, Mike McQueary, who said he witnessed the alleged incident in a Penn State locker room in 2002.

Lisa M. Powers, a Penn State spokeswoman, told CNN that the university police has no record of any police report filed by McQueary. “Today was the first we have heard of this through the media,” Powers told CNN in an e-mail.

State College police also had no reports from McQueary, according to State College Police Chief Tom King. (State College is the town surrounding the university campus).

However, grand jury records indicate that McQueary did talk to Gary Schultz, who was then senior vice president for finance and business, and that Schultz never presented the information to university police.

But, in the e-mail obtained by The Morning Call newspaper of Allentown, Pennsylvania, McQueary said that he helped stop the assault and talked with police about it.

“I did stop it, not physically, but made sure it was stopped when I left that locker room,” McQueary wrote in the November 8 e-mail to a former classmate.

“No one can imagine my thoughts or wants to be in my shoes for those 30-45 seconds,” McQueary said. “Trust me.”

In his e-mail, McQueary also wrote that he “did have discussions with police and with the official at the university in charge of police” after the alleged incident involving Sandusky.

There are situations in law enforcement in which conversations with officers don’t result in official police reports, according to In Session legal contributor Sunny Hostin.

“Sometimes a tip is given to a sex crimes detective, notes are taken, the witness account is investigated but a report isn’t generated, especially if it is determined that no crime occurred,” Hostin told CNN. “Since we don’t know the circumstances surrounding McQueary’s alleged conversations with police, it is impossible to determine what happened. We also don’t know what the protocol is at the campus police department and the city police department.”

The alleged locker room rape by McQueary, who was then a graduate assistant, was detailed in a grand jury report released this month.

According to the report, McQueary told Joe Paterno, who was then the team’s coach; Paterno then alerted his boss, the school’s athletic director.

The scandal revolves around Sandusky, charged by Pennsylvania’s attorney general with 40 counts in what authorities allege was the sexual abuse of eight boys, and allegations that Penn State officials failed to inform police when the complaints reached them.

Timeline of the Penn State scandal

A source with knowledge of the investigation told CNN that the McQueary e-mail is not inconsistent with the grand jury presentment.

Sandusky is free on $100,000 bail, against the wishes of prosecutors.

The grand jury presentment is a summary of the proceedings, not a complete transcription. The grand jury report led to the firing last week of Paterno and Penn State President Graham Spanier. McQueary was put on administrative leave.

Read the grand jury findings in the case (PDF) [WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT]

The report says Sandusky molested young boys after developing close relationships with them through The Second Mile, a charity he founded for at-risk youths.

On Wednesday a new judge was assigned to the case against Sandusky in the wake of a controversy over the Centre County judge who had been on case. That judge — who freed Sandusky on $100,000 bail — had volunteered at Sandusky’s The Second Mile charity.

Her replacement in the case is Robert E. Scott, a senior judge of Westmoreland County, who will preside over Sandusky’s preliminary hearing on December 7.

Judge Scott “has no known connections with the Pennsylvania State University, the Second Mile charity, nor any officers or representatives of any of those entities,” according to the administrative office of Pennsylvania courts.

A spokeswoman for a nonprofit agency serving New York City children has informed authorities that the Sandusky family hosted at least one child from a low-income family during a summer vacation.

The Fresh Air Fund provides free summer vacations to New York City children from low-income communities; at least one child stayed in the Sandusky home in the mid-1990s, said spokeswoman Andrea Kotuk.

Five more children are thought to have stayed in the home during the 1970s, Kotuk said.

In a separate development, public records and legal notices show that Paterno, 84, transferred ownership of his family home to his wife, Sue, for $1 in July.

Paterno’s attorney, Wick Sollers, said in an e-mail that the transfer was “unrelated to and unaffected by the current situation. The Paternos have been engaged in a multi-year estate planning program and this was simply one element of that plan.”

Mark Lloyd, a certified estate planner in Atlanta, said the Tax Relief Act set the maximum gift that would not incur inheritance tax at $5 million, so splitting assets and utilizing trusts may be part of estate planning for a couple with an estate worth more than that amount.

CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin said he wasn’t drawing any conclusion about the transfer. “It’s hard to know what kind of advice the Paterno family received,” he said. “Frankly, it’s hard for me to imagine the transfer was done to avoid a possible civil judgment.”

The case has been slow to unfold in the public domain, at least in part because Penn State is exempt from Pennsylvania’s open records law, making it difficult to get information about who knew what and when regarding the sex-abuse claims.

Penn State and three other schools that receive state funds don’t fall under Pennsylvania’s Right to Know Law, according to Terry Mutchler, the executive director of the state’s Office of Open Records.

“If this were an investigation involving another university … that did have a scandal at its doorstep, they were subject to the Right to Know Law,” Mutchler told CNN.

“You were able to obtain, in that situation, e-mails, copies of incident reports at the police department, any kind of policies that came out with the Board of Trustees. That would all be available,” she said. “At Penn State, however, that’s off limits.”

In 2007, state lawmakers considered a change that would have included the school under the open records law. But then-President Spanier testified against the move before the House State Government Committee.

He told the legislature he was concerned about cost and compliance and that there were competitive reasons for keeping records private.

“Nobody would argue the point that the public has a right to know how public funds are spent,” Spanier said at the time. “But these proposals will fundamentally change the way we operate, the way our trustees govern and the way the university administers their policies.”

Preliminary hearings for Curley, the athletic director, and Schultz, who has retired as senior vice president, were set Wednesday for December 6 in Dauphin County Magistrate Court, before Magisterial Judge William C. Wenner. They are accused of lying to the grand jury.

Sandusky told NBC’s Bob Costas on Monday that he has been falsely accused, saying that he only “horsed around” with kids in the shower after workouts.

Sandusky denied being sexually attracted to boys, and his lawyer, Joe Amendola, told CNN on Monday night that showering with children does not equate automatically to sexual assault.

In the NBC interview, Sandusky denied one of the charges in the grand jury report — that McQueary had walked in on him raping a boy about 10 years of age.

The mother of one of Sandusky’s alleged victims — identified as Victim 1 in the indictment — told CNN on Wednesday that her son watched the NBC interview and cried. “I said, ‘Well, why did you cry?’ And he said, ‘Because I’m afraid that he might go free,’ ” said the woman, whose face and voice were altered to protect her — and by extension her son’s — identity.

She said she first got clues that something was wrong when her son’s behavior changed. “He went from like being a perfect 1,2,3 magic child to being ornery and being arrogant and mean,” she said. But when her son asked her to lie to Sandusky when he called the house, she became suspicious.

“Then, out of the blue, one day he was sitting at the computer and wanted to look up ‘sex weirdos.’ He asked me ‘What’s the website you get on to look them up?’ And I told him it was Megan’s Law. And he said, ‘Well, how do I type it in?’ So, I gave him the web address and he typed it into the computer and I said, ‘Who are you looking for?’ and he said ‘Jerry.’

“I kinda froze. I was like, wow. ‘What are you looking him up for?’ And he was like, ‘Oh, I don’t know. I just want to see if he’s on there.’ I said, ‘Well, why would he be on there? Do you have something you want to tell me?’ and he was like, ‘No.’”

Asked what was going on with Sandusky, the boy answered, “Sometimes he just acts weird. So I just wanted to see if he was on there, that’s all.’”

The mother said that, a few days afterward, she learned that Sandusky had been taking her son out of school without her permission, so she called school officials and asked them to talk to her son “and just ask him how he feels.”

Soon after, the principal called her back in tears and invited the boy’s mother to meet with her and the school guidance counselor, the mother said.

“They told me that my son had said some things about that there was a problem with Jerry,” she said. “He just said that he thought he needed to tell somebody or it would get worse.”

The mother said that, at that point, she asked the school officials to call the police. “They said I needed to think about the ramifications of what would happen if I did that,” she said.

Asked what they meant, the mother said, “I don’t know. I guess, I’m assuming what we’re going through right now.”

Asked what she would like to see, she said, “I want Jerry Sandusky to go to jail for the rest of his life.”

Sandusky was arrested on November 5, after the release of the grand jury report detailing crimes that he allegedly committed between 1994 and 2009.

Share

11-11-11

I was planning on doing a seasonal sports wrap-up, but I’ve decided that might be a little tricky, as the season has not actually wrapped up yet. Volleyball and soccer just keep winning! Of course, by the time this is printed, it might all be over, but what can I do? There’s always pro sports. On the other hand, hockey has only just started, the Cardinals just won the World Series, and the NBA is still in a lockout, although that might change soon. College hoops doesn’t start for a couple more days, and football is… football. So sports will have to wait.

Hey, guess what Friday is. It’s 11-11-11. You probably knew that. It’s also our Homecoming, and Skyrim comes out. But I had to wonder if there’s any significance behind it. First of all, there’s a movie coming out called 11-11-11. Looks pretty creepy to me. Anyway, in the movie, characters sometimes suffer from 11:11 syndrome: A semi-fictitious tendency people have to look at the clock more at 11:11 AM or PM than at almost all other times. When I first researched this, naturally I was inclined to check the clock. Yeah, it was 11:11 PM. No joke.

In the ancient to medieval days, back when there was tons of superstition, “prophets” placed values on numbers. While most doubt the credibility of these, the number 11 had a surprisingly popular trend – of being ominous. That’s right. A thousand years ago, 11 was an absolutely horrible number. No redeeming qualities whatsoever. In roughly four days from the moment that I’m writing these words, the time will be 11:11 PM with 11 seconds on 11-11-11. I wonder if this is like 12-21-12 for the Mayans but instead for the Romans or wherever these people came from.

Eleven is the number of soccer players per team on a field. It’s also the atomic number for sodium. Many people resent the number 11 as at that point, counting on one’s fingers becomes extremely difficult. And if you ask the wrong person, it’s the sum of 1 and 1.

Those are my scattered, mediocrely-researched thoughts about 11:11 at 11-11-11. Basketball has just started, so with that and the end of fall sports, expect the next Sports N’ Stuff to actually have SA sports. That’s that.

Source: http://my.hsj.org/Schools/Newspaper/tabid/100/view/frontpage/articleid/474078/newspaperid/4515/111111.aspx

Share