Jerry Sandusky on Suicide Watch After Being Found Guilty of Child Sex Abuse
One day after being found guilty on 45 of 48 child-sex-abuse counts, former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky has been placed on suicide watch, according to FOXSports.com.
UPDATE: Saturday, June 23 at 6:37 p.m. ET by Richard Langford
Jerry Sandusky's lawyers have said that, as jury selection began, they made a sealed motion asking to resign from the case. The motion was, obviously, denied.
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The Associated Press passed along the news and shared this quote from attorney Joe Amendola:
"We told the trial court, the Superior Court and the Supreme Court we were not prepared to proceed to trial in June due to numerous issues, and we asked to withdraw from the case for those reasons.
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While seven months had passed from the charges being made to the trial, the AP said that legal experts say that "is a fast pace by Pennsylvania standards" for a trial dealing with such serious charges.
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Sandusky is reportedly not considered to be suicidal, but the 68-year-old has been placed in protective custody as a precaution, according to his attorney, Karl Rominger.
"The judge in this case and the warden in this case decided to take a measure not meant to suggest in any way that he is suicidal, but simply to put the precautions in place first and then evaluate later," Rominger said.
FOXSports.com is reporting that Sandusky will be sentenced in three months and faces a maximum of 442 years in prison. He will be evaluated at Pennsylvania's Camp Hill diagnostic facility before being sent to a sex-offender unit in state prison, according to the report.
It is unclear how long Sandusky will be specially monitored, but it appears to be a temporary arrangement.
Sandusky's week-long trial ended on Friday night following a day and a half of jury deliberations, during which the jury requested to rehear testimony from former Penn State assistant coach Mike McQueary, who testified that he saw Sandusky sexually abusing a boy in a Penn State locker-room shower.
A grand jury initially indicted Sandusky on Nov. 4, and it led to one of the biggest scandals in the history of collegiate sports. Longtime Penn State head football coach Joe Paterno was fired for not properly reporting what McQueary had told him, and several other Penn State administrators were ousted as well.
Attorney Joe Amendola has said that he plans to appeal Sandusky's conviction, according to FOXSports.com, so the saga of the disgraced coach may be far from over.
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