
The full text of the report commissioned by the Paterno family containing the results of an investigation carried out by Wick Sollers, an attorney of the King & Spalding law firm based in Washington D.C.

I'm not one to believe in conspiracy theories or parse words, especially with all that's gone on at Penn State in the last year and a half. But as I started to read the NCAA's response to Pennsylvania's lawsuit calling for the sanctions to be overturned, I couldn't help but notice one glaring error on the first page that really makes me question how much the NCAA actually knows about what has happened at Penn State (as if that wasn't in question previously).

The Paterno family is set to release its counter to the Freeh Report on Sunday morning, the Centre Daily Times is reporting. According to a CDT source, the 180 page report will be released and discussed on ESPN's "Outside the Lines" at 9 a.m. on Sunday.

The NCAA responded to Pennsylvania's lawsuit today, saying that Pennsylvania does not have grounds to sue the NCAA over an issue of discipline.
"This lawsuit is an inappropriate attempt to drag the federal courts into an intra-state political dispute," the response states. "The remedial measures that Penn State agreed to were controversial, and have elicited strong feelings on all sides. Some think they are too harsh, and some think they are too lenient. But none of those feelings have anything to do with the antitrust laws."

Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane has appointed special prosecutor Geoffrey Moulton to investigate the state's handling of the Sandusky scandal, fulfilling her campaign promise to investigate Governor Corbett's role in potentially slow playing Sandusky's arrest for political gain.

Jerry Sandusky appeared in the website url of an AOL Sporting News story on Monday in an article that had nothing to do with Jerry Sandusky.