George Gollin/Jerry Sandusky Connection? - Herbert Spencer - 11-11-2011
A major Midwestern university knowingly employs an abusive moral reprobate, sweeps it under the rug for years….until it blows up in their faces.
Penn State? Or Illinois??????
Quote:…George Gollin also made gun-related threats to five innocent people and has abused the Internet to smear these same people out of vengeance for having to remove his personal attacks from University property. George Gollin last week was reported to local POLICE AND to the University of Illinois POLICE for harassment, stalking and making a gun-related threat.
http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/35709-13-george-gollin-truth-from
Quote:...In 2003 university spokesperson Robin Kaler stated that the university did not support George Gollin’s hobby of stalking and attacking small Christian schools because it was outside the area of his supposed expertise.
But in the face of these admonishments George Gollin continued with his hobby, aided by gay Oregon bureaucrat Alan Contreras. Contreras was judged to be an anti-Christian bigot and civil rights violator in an Oregon court proceeding, and that judgment was affirmed on appeal.
http://www.concern-liberians.org/chat_room/view_topic.php?id=59254&forum_id=2
Quote:...George Gollin used violent imagery similar to that used by the infamous Zodiac Killer to threaten people he believed had posted an embarrassing photo of him on the internet.
He also is alleged to have violated federal law by falsely posing as a government official, and has been caught allegedly posting other people’s social security numbers on his university web site.
Using the code name “galanga,” George Gollin made 1,280 posts on an internet website operated by a pedophile-pandering gay pornographer.
http://www.freak-search.com/en/thread/1669482/can_illinois_taxpayers_afford_more_george_gollin_scandals
Quote:A University of Illinois science teacher has been linked to a notorious internet pedophile-pandering pornographer.
George Gollin (George D. Gollin, George Dana Gollin) has been a frequent poster on one of pornographer Thomas ‘Chip’ White’s websites. Hiding behind the alias ‘galanga,’ George Gollin has made over 1,280 posts on the g ay boy po rnographer’s discussion forums.
In a recent interview George Gollin stated, ‘I was going to *** them.’
...George Gollin’s *** daughter exposed her family’s sordid private activities in her public blogs". She listens to what she describes as ‘the suck my *** *** my *** song’ with her father George Gollin. She also revealed that she shares chocolate vaginas with her mother, college administrator Melanie Loots, who refers to Catholics as 'dirty Papists.' Loots was cited by the FDA for illegally selling 386 mutant lab pigs to the public for food!
http://george-gollin.pissedconsumer.com/george-gollin-g-a-y-p-o-r-n-ography-link-e2-e2-9ci-was-going-to-them-e2-9d-20101225213133.html
RE: George Gollin/Jerry Sandusky Connection? - Don Dresden - 11-11-2011
Quote:...George Gollin’s *** daughter exposed her family’s sordid private activities in her public blogs". She listens to what she describes as ‘the suck my *** *** my *** song’ with her father George Gollin.
Jerry Sandusky Abuse Case Makes Us Wonder About His Own Kids
You have to wonder what was happening on the Gollin plantation that caused his daughter to become a lesbian who obviously hates her parents.
She does everything in her power to embarrass them, including maintaining not one but two filthy public blogs.
She posts things like "piss! fuck you rock n roll family, you always let me down!"
She reveals sordid facts like listening to the "Suck My Dick Fuck My Ass" song while alone with her father. Something very odd about that situation. Small wonder she prefers living in Poland, thousands of miles away from her progenitors.
Quote:"[I]ntrafamily perpetrators constitute from one-third to one-half of all perpetrators against girls and only about one-tenth to one-fifth of all perpetrators against boys. There is no question that intrafamily abuse is more likely to go on over a longer period of time and in some of its forms, particularly parent-child abuse, has been shown to have more serious consequences" (Finkelhor, 1994).
http://www.ncvc.org/ncvc/main.aspx?dbName=DocumentViewer&DocumentID=32315
Quote:Disrespect for each others' privacy, rights, and individuality is common in incest families.
http://surrealist.org/gurukula/abusesymptoms.html
RE: George Gollin/Jerry Sandusky Connection? - Virtual Bison - 11-11-2011
Well the difference between Sandusky is that there is a strong possibility that he will be convicted of something and go to prison. Gollin, on the other hand does whatever the hell he wants and will probably never go to jail for anything.
RE: George Gollin/Jerry Sandusky Connection? - WilliamW - 11-12-2011
(11-11-2011, 05:45 PM)Virtual Bison Wrote: Gollin, on the other hand does whatever the hell he wants and will probably never go to jail for anything.
Just because he hasn't yet doesn't mean he won't. And jail may be the least of his problems if someone decides to resolve the matter up close and personal.
What potential civil liability does U of I face because Gollin's aberrance has metastasized through the university? And will they be shutting down the physics department for two years to eliminate a systemic problem?
Quote:“Darren Rovell of CNBC spoke with a “legal insider” who estimated that Penn State’s liability in the civil lawsuits will be “easily $100 million.”
“Another estimate, made by an attorney on the ‘Happy Hour with JP Peterson’ show on 1010 Sports also estimated the cost of civil lawsuits to be at least $100 million, and could reach $250 million.”
***
“It is conceivable that the process could lead the trustees to consider a total shutdown of the football program as the best way to excise all that is wrong…
“Despite the astonishing revelations of the past several days, it will not be easy for the trustees to do what they must do. They will face Paterno’s legions of fans and his significant influence metastasized through the university, based both on his decades of success and his generosity to the university community. It is difficult to estimate the extent of the role Paterno’s image and presence will have on the effort to change the athletic department culture…
“Consider the cancellation of the football program for a period of at least two years. It might not be possible to establish a new culture without the total elimination of the old one. A two-year hiatus might be the only way to eliminate a systemic problem.
http://hotair.com/archives/2011/11/10/quotes-of-the-day-856/
RE: George Gollin/Jerry Sandusky Connection? - Virtual Bison - 11-12-2011
(11-12-2011, 04:21 AM)WilliamW Wrote: (11-11-2011, 05:45 PM)Virtual Bison Wrote: Gollin, on the other hand does whatever the hell he wants and will probably never go to jail for anything.
Just because he hasn't yet doesn't mean he won't. And jail may be the least of his problems if someone decides to resolve the matter up close and personal.
What potential civil liability does U of I face because Gollin's aberrance has metastasized through the university? And will they be shutting down the physics department for two years to eliminate a systemic problem?
Quote:“Darren Rovell of CNBC spoke with a “legal insider” who estimated that Penn State’s liability in the civil lawsuits will be “easily $100 million.”
“Another estimate, made by an attorney on the ‘Happy Hour with JP Peterson’ show on 1010 Sports also estimated the cost of civil lawsuits to be at least $100 million, and could reach $250 million.”
***
“It is conceivable that the process could lead the trustees to consider a total shutdown of the football program as the best way to excise all that is wrong…
“Despite the astonishing revelations of the past several days, it will not be easy for the trustees to do what they must do. They will face Paterno’s legions of fans and his significant influence metastasized through the university, based both on his decades of success and his generosity to the university community. It is difficult to estimate the extent of the role Paterno’s image and presence will have on the effort to change the athletic department culture…
“Consider the cancellation of the football program for a period of at least two years. It might not be possible to establish a new culture without the total elimination of the old one. A two-year hiatus might be the only way to eliminate a systemic problem.
http://hotair.com/archives/2011/11/10/quotes-of-the-day-856/ Well I have more respect for Paterno because, unlike Gollin he actually had talent.
Of course if he actually knew that his friend was a schmuck then he was a jerk for letting it happen.
But to get back to Gollin, he really does have a lot of friends in high places and the fact that some actually think he is doing something good seems to help him a lot. Like that stupid bitch congresswoman from Minnesota, whatever her name is.
I only wish that some of his targets would file a class action suite against him. Maybe if Gollin gets socked with a huge civil suit and gets taken to the cleaners it would get him to shut his pie hole.
RE: George Gollin/Jerry Sandusky Connection? - Jerry Sandusky - 11-14-2011
Keep up the good work, George Gollin. You are a inspiration to all of us. Hope your book will be as sucksexfull as mine.
Love,
Jerry
RE: George Gollin/Jerry Sandusky Connection? - Winston Smith - 11-15-2011
Quote:George Gollin last week was reported to local POLICE AND to the University of Illinois POLICE for harassment, stalking and making a gun-related threat.
We know that George Gollin has been reported to the campus police and campus administration, yet they have taken no apparent steps to moderate his conduct. Why no Clery Act investigation? Shouldn't the University of Illinois be issuing warnings about George Gollin and his activities?
Quote:.
Crime on Campus: Do Colleges Have Too Much Power?
By KAYLA WEBLEY | Time.com – 6 hrs ago.
A lot of big colleges have their own police departments. They are staffed with sworn officers who have the ability to investigate everything from burglaries to murder. Depending on the type of transgression and how it gets reported, some alleged crimes are dealt with in on-campus proceedings and some are passed on to local prosecutors. One of the most troubling aspects of the Penn State scandal is that school officials who were notified that a young boy was allegedly raped in a campus shower in 2002 did not report the incident to local authorities. Their inaction begs the question that even though there are laws in place that stipulate the proper protocol to follow upon hearing reports of sexual abuse, assault and harassment on campus, What's to stop officials at large-scale institutions — many of which operate full-fledged police departments — from sweeping such unpleasantness under the rug?
It's often hard to know how alleged crimes are handled on campus, in part because honor committees and other campus judicial systems have confidential proceedings. One of the few oversight tools the government has is the Clery Act. Named after a Lehigh University student who was raped and strangled by another student in 1986 in her dorm room, the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act requires all colleges and universities that participate in federal financial-aid programs to disclose each year the number of alleged criminal offenses, including sexual offenses, that are recorded on campus or in other areas that are under university control, such as remote classrooms and fraternity houses. In addition, schools must also issue timely warnings in cases in which the reported crime represents a threat to the campus community. Last week the Department of Education announced that it was launching Clery Act investigations at two schools: one at Penn State involving allegations that former defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky had sexually assaulted boys on campus and the other at Milwaukee's Marquette University for allegedly failing to report in a timely manner allegations that two athletes had sexually assaulted female students. (Read about whether colleges are doing enough to combat sexual violence.)
"If these allegations of sexual abuse are true, then this is a horrible tragedy for those young boys," Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said in a statement announcing the department's investigation into Penn State. "If it turns out that some people at the school knew of the abuse and did nothing or covered it up, that makes it even worse. Schools and school officials have a legal and moral responsibility to protect children and young people from violence and abuse."
But despite having such responsibility, disclosing campus crime has often been a process fraught with confusion, loopholes, inaction, inconsistencies and, in some cases, negligence and cover-ups. To date, seven colleges and universities have paid Clery Act fines for failure to comply with the law; sometimes the violation stemmed from not having the appropriate institutional structures in place, sometimes from failing to disclose information. The most egregious case to date took place at Eastern Michigan University in 2006 when administrators were found to have covered up the rape and murder of a student, letting her parents think she had died of natural causes. The university was fined $350,000, the largest fine ever paid under the Clery Act. (A lawsuit forced Eastern Michigan to pay the victim's family an additional $2.5 million.)
Going after Penn State and Eastern Michigan for violating reporting requirements in these instances is a bit like going after Al Capone for tax evasion. Where the Clery Act wields the most influence is in how schools handle the much more common transgression of students being sexually assaulted. (Read about fighting school violence.)
Some of the schools that have been investigated for possible Clery Act violations have their own police forces. Others, like Marquette, do not. Because the members of Marquette's public-safety department are not sworn officers, the university had an obligation to report any accusations of sexual assault to a law-enforcement agency, and in the two recent cases involving athletes, the investigations may have been harmed because police did not get the information quickly, according to a statement Milwaukee County district attorney John Chisholm made in May.
The ability schools have to make decisions internally and utilize in-house departments is what allowed a Penn State football player to admit in a campus judicial proceeding in December 2002 to raping a fellow student during the fall semester, but not to have his punishment — a two-semester suspension — kick in until after he played in a January bowl game.
Stories like that are why the Department of Education, which is charged with regulating schools under the Clery Act, says it has stepped up its efforts in the past few years, after facing criticism in the past for not conducting enough reviews and not imposing penalties when violations were found. Under the Obama Administration, the department created a team dedicated to compliance, monitoring and enforcement of the Clery Act. So far this year, six institutions have been found at fault and are facing fines — Oregon State University, Lincoln University in Missouri, the University of Northern Iowa, the University of Vermont, Washington State University and Yale University — which is the same number of institutions that were fined in the first 18 years of the law's existence. Four other institutions are either in the process of being fined or are appealing. "It takes vigilance," Justin Hamilton, spokesman for the Department of Education said. "We can never be in every university all the time, nor do we want to be. We want to trust the schools and believe that they are living up to their obligations, but when they're not, we will act decisively, effectively and fairly." Hamilton says the department now regularly conducts campus visits even on those campuses where no incidents have been reported, closely monitors media reports and has conversations with people on the ground in an effort to be more proactive.
S. Daniel Carter, director of public policy for Security on Campus, a nonprofit dedicated to the prevention of campus crime, said the Administration's efforts have helped. "One of the keys to ensuring that colleges and universities do not keep crimes, including sexual violence, secret is for the Department of Education to continue improving its Clery Act oversight," he said. At the time of the March 2002 incident involving Sandusky and a young boy in a Penn State locker room, only nine schools had ever even been reviewed under the law and only one fine (a modest $15,000) had ever been paid. Now a total of 49 schools have been reviewed, and 26 of them have been reviewed in just the past three years. According to Carter, the majority of the investigations in the past three years were randomly selected, whereas in the past, reviews were generally only conducted in the aftermath of a high-profile incident. Additionally, six-figure fines are now the norm rather than the exception. "The random reviews in tandem with six-figure fines are a strong incentive for institutions to not try and sweep things under the rug," Carter said. Still, he added, "Ultimately, sometimes there's no way to know what's happening on campus unless someone who does know comes forward."
RE: George Gollin/Jerry Sandusky Connection? - Armando Ramos - 11-15-2011
(11-12-2011, 05:44 PM)Virtual Bison Wrote: I only wish that some of his targets would file a class action suite against him. Maybe if Gollin gets socked with a huge civil suit and gets taken to the cleaners it would get him to shut his pie hole.
I'm sure that has been and is being contemplated this very minute. The question is where are you going to get a fair trial against the U of Illness? Certainly not in IL. Look how it works in PA:
Quote:The judge who freed alleged Penn State kid-sex fiend Jerry Sandusky on bail -- with no strings attached -- is a volunteer with the charity Sandusky mined for victims, it was reported last night.
The explosive news came as Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett warned that there are likely more young men out there who were allegedly abused as children by the ex-assistant coach.
Pennsylvania district Judge Leslie Dutchcot ignored prosecutors’ request for $500,000 bail -- and an electronic ankle bracelet -- for Sandusky, instead freeing him on $100,000, according to the Web site Deadspin.
Dutchcot -- who volunteers for the Second Mile children’s charity, as well as organizations such as the American Heart Association -- ordered that Sandusky “pay nothing unless he failed to show up for a court hearing.”
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/national/who_he_to_judge_Pa1u7dlj5Qczv6zSDt5aML
The defendant in one of the most sickening crimes in recent history gets no strings bail because the local judge works for the pervert's charity. Is the Illinois justice system any less a cesspool? If they give a "kid-sex fiend" such cozy treatment in PA would a reprobate like Gollin expect anything less in IL?
RE: George Gollin/Jerry Sandusky Connection? - Virtual Bison - 11-16-2011
It really is an ugly case, this Penn State thing.
I really like Joe Paterno as a coach. But this weird shit coming out about Sandusky is really getting ugly.
Last night Sandusky denied it all. Is he telling the truth? I hope it all becomes known.
But if he is guilty the Penn State is going to have its name dragged through the mud.
Its especially sad for people like me who considered Paterno a hero. If he really did cover for a sex offender than his stellar career will forever have a footmark on it.
RE: George Gollin/Jerry Sandusky Connection? - Jerry Sandusky - 06-24-2012
While I'm away I'll be working on my new book. It's a collection of my memoirs, love letters and fantasies. I think I'll call it "A Dream of Serpents." Hope you boys will write to me.
Love,
Jerry
PS. I seem to be making lots of new friends here in prison. In fact, some of the guys have given me a nice nickname--"Short Eyes." That's sort of catchy, don't you think?
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