Editor's Note: On May 11, 2017, Dustin Struble is scheduled to testify in a
hearing before Judge John Foradora in a Bellefonte, PA, courthouse. He is known as “Victim 7” in the Jerry
Sandusky case.
Investigator and science
writer Mark Pendergrast is near completion of a book on the Sandusky case, The
Most Hated Man in America: Jerry Sandusky and the Rush to Judgment, which will
be published late in 2017. Because he
thinks that some of the information he has unearthed is important to reveal
now, he has allowed BigTrial.net to publish excerpts from it.
By Mark Pendergrast
for BigTrial.net
By Mark Pendergrast
for BigTrial.net
Dustin Struble (eventually to be labeled “Victim Number 7”),
born on October 10, 1984, was two years older than Zachary Konstas [the boy in
the 1998 Sandusky shower incident]. The two had been friends since their Second
Mile days. The police contacted Struble
in January of 2011, and after his second interview with police, he told them
that he was entering psychotherapy on February 22, 2011. Konstas would subsequently ask about
Struble’s counseling experience during phone calls. He wanted to know if he had “remembered
anything more”, indicating that Struble was in the process of recovering
memories during therapy.[1] From the context, it is likely that Konstas
was also trying to “remember” more during therapy sessions of his own.
Dustin Struble grew up with both parents and two sisters in
Milesburg, Pennsylvania. He was referred
to the Second Mile program by a guidance counselor in 1995 and attended three
Second Mile camps for three consecutive summers, beginning that year. He said that he loved the experience, and he
got to know Jerry Sandusky, occasionally spending the night at the Sandusky
home.
In 2004, Struble wrote in his own handwriting on an application for a scholarship from Second Mile, “Jerry Sandusky, he has helped me understand so much about myself. He is such a kind and caring gentleman, and I will never forget him.” Struble attended Penn State football games and tailgating parties every year for fourteen years with the Sanduskys, until he was twenty-five.
In 2004, Struble wrote in his own handwriting on an application for a scholarship from Second Mile, “Jerry Sandusky, he has helped me understand so much about myself. He is such a kind and caring gentleman, and I will never forget him.” Struble attended Penn State football games and tailgating parties every year for fourteen years with the Sanduskys, until he was twenty-five.
On April 11, 2011, Struble testified at the Sandusky grand
jury proceeding. He said nothing about
bear hugs, hair washing, or being dried off in the shower. He said that Sandusky had put his hand on his
waistband, but “I can say he never went the whole way down and grabbed
anything.”[2] · He denied that Sandusky had kissed him and
said that Sandusky had never touched his privates or fondled him at all over
his clothes. Indeed, Struble said that
Sandusky had never had any physical contact with him at all in the shower. When he did shower with Sandusky, also
present were “other assistant coaches or players or there was a couple random
people that were in there from time to time….they would just be passing through
and say hi…”
After his grand jury testimony, Struble signed a contingency
agreement with State College, PA, attorney Andrew Shubin, meaning that the
lawyer would only be paid if Struble received compensation. Lawyers in such cases typically receive from
33 to 40 percent of the total payment.[3] Before the June 2012 trial, Struble met with
Shubin from ten to fifteen times. During
his trial testimony, he claimed not to know the contents of the contingency
agreement he had signed.
As late as January 2012, Struble apparently was still
ambivalent about his feelings for Sandusky.
That month, when he ran into Todd Reed, a Sandusky protégé and
supporter, he told Reed that he and his friend Zach Kontas were both “very
shocked” by the allegations and that “Zach was crying on the phone [with Dustin
Struble] because he was upset about Jerry Sandusky and this situation….Zach was
upset because his mom was pushing Zach to accuse Jerry.”[4]
By the time of the trial, Struble had changed his story,
asserting that Sandusky gave him bear hugs, washed his hair in the shower, and
then dried him off. He said that he had
only disclosed these detailed to his attorneys and prosecutor Joe McGettigan a
few months before the trial. Now he testified that Sandusky put his hand down
his pants and touched his penis in the car, that Sandusky had grabbed him in
the shower and pushed the front of his body up against the back of Dustin’s
body, that Sandusky had touched his nipples and blown on his stomach. Now he said that that he never saw anybody
else in the shower area, implying that he and Sandusky were alone there.
Defense attorney Joe Amendola challenged Struble, asking why
he had changed his testimony so radically since the previous year.
Amendola: But today
now you recall that he put his hand down pants, Mr. Sandusky [did], and grabbed
your penis?
Struble: Yes. That
doorway that I had closed has since been reopening more. More things have been coming back and things
have changed since that grand jury testimony.
Through counseling and different things, I can remember a lot more
detail that I had pushed aside than I did at that point.[5]
Struble went on to explain more about how his repressed
memories had returned in therapy.
“Through counseling and through talking about different events, through
talking about things in my past, different things triggered different memories
and [I] have had more things come back, and it’s changed a lot about what I can
remember today and what I could remember before, because I had everything
negative blocked out. Now with the grand
jury testimony was when I was just starting to open up that door, so to speak.”[6]
Further defending his changed testimony, Struble explained:
“No, that testimony is what I had recalled at that time. Through – again, through counseling, through
talking about things, I have remembered a great deal more things that I blocked
out. And at that time, that was, yes,
that’s what I thought but at this time that has changed.”[7]
During his testimony, Struble also revealed that he and
Zachary Konstas had talked about how the repressed memory therapy was
going. “Zach would ask me sort of what
happened to me almost -- I feel so that he could confide in me. But he had asked me if I remembered anything
more, if counseling was helping, just all kinds of random things.”[8]
When prosecutor McGettigan asked Struble why he hadn’t
disclosed Sandusky’s abuse to the police during his first or second
interrogation, Struble explained: “I had
sort of blocked out that part of my life.
Obviously, going to footballs games and those kind of things, I had
chose sort of to keep out in the open, so to speak. And then the more negative things, I had sort
of pushed into the back of my mind, sort of like closing a door,
closing—putting stuff in the attic and closing the door to it. That’s what I feel like I did.”[9]
Dustin Struble was the only alleged Sandusky victim who
agreed to speak to me on the record. In
October 2014, I spoke with him at length in his home in State College,
Pennsylvania, with follow-up by email and phone, and he verified that he had
recovered memories of abuse and that he thought the door to his abuse memories
was still only part-way open. He
remained in therapy with Cindy McNab at The Highlands in State College.
“Actually both of my therapists have suggested that I have
repressed memories, and that’s why we have been working on looking back on my
life for triggers. My therapist has
suggested that I may still have more repressed memories that have yet to be
revealed, and this could be a big cause of the depression that I still carry
today. We are still currently working on
that.”[10]
I tried to clarify how his memories came back, asking
whether that happened during therapy sessions and whether his therapist used
any form of trance work. No, he said,
“the memories come back instantly but fragmented, almost like a light bulb
going off in your mind but with a sick feeling accompanying it. Most of these triggers occur at random
places/times and are utterly unexpected.
For me it feels like a giant puzzle that I seemingly stumble into key
pieces. However, I feel like there are a
few more missing pieces that are needed to solve this particular puzzle. When these events happen, I do discuss them
with my therapist most of the time.”[11]
Late in 2013, Struble and four or five other alleged
Sandusky victims met for weekly group therapy sessions over a three month
period, which Struble found particularly validating and helpful in terms of
triggering new memories. “That helped me
go back and confront memories from the past.
It had a big impact on me, hearing people echo what I couldn’t put into
words.”[12]
I have to say that I liked Dustin Struble, who had just
turned thirty, had bought a new house and car with the compensation money he
had received from Penn State, and was planning to get married the following
year. Bored at home, he went back to
working part-time as a cook at the Eat’nPark restaurant. He considered himself an introvert and still
struggled with depression. He used to
smoke a lot of marijuana but stopped after he was arrested for selling it, and
then he lost most of his friends when the police coerced him into taking part
in a sting operation. “I take legal
drugs now,” he said. “I was on six but
now just four -- Selexa is an anti-depressant, Xanax for anxiety, Aderal for
ADHD, and Ambion to sleep at night.”[13]
It was very clear that Struble, a personable but troubled
young man, now truly believed that Sandusky had abused him, based on his
recovered memories. I asked what he
would have told me about Jerry Sandusky if I had asked him in 2010. “I would have said I went to games with him
and that we were friends. At that point
I was completely shut off to the negative aspects of it, wasn’t even aware of
them really.”[14]
End of excerpt from The Most Hated Man in America: Jerry
Sandusky and the Rush to Judgment. Below
is an email Mark Pendergrast sent to Dustin Struble a year later, but he never
responded to it:
July 2, 2015, email
Hi, Dustin – I am so glad that you are willing to read Victims of Memory
and I mailed it to you today by priority mail.
I hope it gets there before you leave for your honeymoon. In my cover letter, you’ll see I suggested
that you start with Chapters 2 and 3, but I’m thinking that Chapter 1 is also
very important because it explains how the repressed memory fad began in the
1980s and what the most important books supporting the idea of repressed
memories were at that time, such as The Courage to Heal, so I suggest you start
with it. Here are some quick summary
points for you to consider:
Sigmund Freud made this theory up (of repressed sexual abuse
memories) in 1895, then changed his mind about it two years later, but the
theory just won’t go away. Most people
still believe that humans can “repress” traumatic childhood memories and then
“remember” them years later.
In fact, memory science tells us that people tend to
remember traumatic events better than other events in their lives. They may not remember them in perfect detail,
but they do not completely forget abusive incidents that were perceived as
traumatic at the time.
Repressed memory therapy became a fad in the USA around
1988-1998, but it was debunked by memory scientists, researchers, professional
associations, and many court cases.
But repressed memory therapy did not go away, it just went
quietly underground. Many therapists
still believe in this theory and encourage clients to “remember” and believe in
illusory abuse memories. These
therapists are not “bad” people. They
truly believe they are doing good.
People can come to believe in very detailed memories of
sexual abuse even though the abuse never occurred. Often therapists or their clients build on
things that really did happen, such as a shower or wrestling around or a
bedtime goodnight, and they get people to visualize additional things that did
not happen during that shower, wrestling around, or saying goodnight, etc.
All memory is imperfect and subject to distortion, even
without influential therapy. We all tend
to revise our memories to fit our current beliefs and emotions. That could account for Mike McQueary’s
changed memory of the shower scene, ten years after the fact, when he
visualized seeing Jerry Sandusky behind a boy against the wall, when in fact
that is not what he told Dr. Dranov or his father at the time of the
incident. At that time, he just said he
heard slapping sounds that he interpreted as being sexual, then saw Jerry and a
boy walking out of the shower.
I know that you remain convinced that seeing the mesh shorts
and t-shirt triggered a real repressed abuse memory, as did seeing a man with
lots of curly grey chest hair. And this
“explains” why you hated chest hair and shaved yours when you were in your late
teens.
But consider that there is an
alternative explanation that involves self-fulfilling expectations. You were in a state of extreme emotional
agitation and were convinced that Jerry must have abused you, and you had come
to believe in the theory of repressed memories.
In such a state of heightened expectation, it is not surprising that
were “triggered” by mesh clothing. I
don’t know why you shaved your chest hair, but this is the sort of “proof” that
isn’t really proof, such as the woman I wrote about in Victims of Memory who
didn’t like pickles and took that as evidence that she had been raped because
pickles were like penises.
The bottom line is that it is unlikely that people can or do
“repress” traumatic memories. They
remember them all too well. They may not
remember incidents in great detail, but they certainly do not consider someone
to be a good friend and then discover, to their horror, that this person had
sexually abused them for years without their conscious awareness.
There are many other well-researched books about the issue
of repressed memories, such as Remembering Trauma, by Richard McNally, The Myth
of Repressed Memory, by Elizabeth Loftus, Making Monsters, by Richard Ofshe,
and Try to Remember, by Paul McHugh.
Also, Daniel Schacter has written some good books on memory in general,
such as The Seven Sins of Memory: How
the Mind Remembers and Forgets.
Take care, Dustin, and good luck on your journey towards
truth and healing.
--Mark Pendergrast
Update: Victim No. 7's email to Mark Pendergrast become part of legal battle over whether Jerry Sandusky gets a new trial. Read the Centre Daily Times account here.
Although the transcript
of the Grand Jury testimony is not available to the public, defense attorney
Joe Amendola had access to it, and these quotations from it emerged during his
cross-examination of Dustin Struble during the trial.
[1]
Trial Transcript, Day 3, p. 154.
[2]
Trial Transcript, Day 3, p. 143.
[3]
http://thompsonhall.com/contingency-fees/
[4]
Lindsay lawfirm files, “Interview of Todd Reed,” May 4, 2012.
[5]
Sandusky trial transcript, Day 3, p. 143.
[6]
Trial Transcript, Day 3, p. 146.
[7]
Trial Transcript, Day 3, p. 152.
[8]
Trial Transcript, Day 3, p. 154.
[9]
Trial Transcript, Day 3, p. 119.
[10]
Dustin Struble interview; Struble email, Oct. 15, 2014.
[11]
Struble email, Oct. 16, 2014.
[12]
Struble interview.
[13]
Struble interview.
[14]
Dustin Struble interview.
Interesting reading. Along with the lawyers who bring these claims seeking 'compensation' from organizations like Penn State or the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, there is another very interested contingent - the 'therapists' who are riding the gravy train to the very last stop.
ReplyDeleteWhat I am not getting is that will all these victims and claimants, the Out Of Program Contact has never been addressed by the leadership of the Second Mile.
ReplyDeleteSimply put - if there is no out of program contact - such as the sleepovers, the workouts, the shopping trips, etc - then these instances of abuse can't happen. Then there's no need to gyrate over the theory of repressed memory.
What the hell was going on over at the Second Mile and why hasn't the leadership there ever explained why their oversight with clients was so shitty?
Sandusky the most hated man in America?? What calculus arrives at that conclusion?( I thought it was Donald Trump). Micheal Jackson was far worse than JS. He built a ranch in Santa Barbara county for the expressed purpose of abusing children. Santa Barbara DA Tom Snedden called it a pedophiles dream. It cost him $33 million in 1995 to have the kids dissappear. For the next ten years, neither his family nor staff did anything to limit his access to 12-13 year old boys from disfunctional families. He was saved at his second pedophilia trial by Tom Consteneau, who pulled a coup fourre by casting Snedden and the disfunctional parents of the victim as people from the loony bin. Jackson's fans danced in the streets of Santa Maria, but Kharma came to haunt MJ and his drug use doubled, eventually leading to his death.
ReplyDeleteWhile this column is interesting, the impact of the changes to Struble's testimony were nil. Sandusky was convicted for attempted indecent assault which was based on putting his hand inside Struble's waistband but NOT actually touching of the genitals.
ReplyDeleteThe additions to the testimony, especially additional details on showering, are a result of the prosecutor's intent to make the case about Penn State -- and deflect attention away from the failures of the state government in not arresting or stopping Sandusky sooner.
In closing, Sandusky should be granted a new trial based on the chicanery of Frank Fina, Joseph McGettigan, and Judge John Cleland -- who all made sure that Penn State was convicted right along with Sandusky.
Well stated Ray
ReplyDelete