For 12 jurors deliberating Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse case, no TV, Twitter or technology | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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For 12 jurors deliberating Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse case, no TV, Twitter or technology

In this June 20, 2012 photo, Matt Sandusky, adopted son of Jerry Sandusky, right, leaves the Centre County Courthouse in Bellefonte, Pa. Just a few hours into jury deliberations. On Thursday, June 22, 2012, Matt Sandusky, came forward for the first time to say in a statement that his father had abused him. The statement didn't detail the abuse allegation. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

There's no Twitter, Facebook or radio. Smartphones, iPads or laptops? No way. And the phones and televisions were removed from their hotel rooms.

The 12 jurors deliberating the child molestation charges against former Penn State assistant coach Jerry Sandusky in the Pennsylvania town of Bellefonte have been sequestered and are essentially under a communications blackout.

There's no access to news or social media, not to mention friends or family; if they want to contact relatives, they must go through court officials. Even personal interactions with other jurors are limited, as they can only talk about the trial that binds them when they deliberate as a group.

"That's to show that all of you are engaged in the same conversation," Judge John Cleland told the panel.

The aim is to prevent any outside influence on their discussions and decision-making. It's also to insulate the jury from headlines that develop beyond the evidence presented in court, as a crush of media encircles the courthouse.

Cleland has instructed jurors to weigh only the case at hand, which charges Sandusky with 48 counts of molestation involving 10 boys.

Theoretically, that would include newly disclosed allegations that Sandusky abused his son Matt. Attorneys for now 33-year-old Matt Sandusky said their client had been prepared to testify against his father if called to the stand.

Those accusations surfaced Thursday afternoon, shortly after jurors began deliberations.

The media blackout also ostensibly insulated the jury from allegations made by Travis Weaver on NBC's "Rock Center with Brian Williams." In an interview aired Thursday night, Weaver said Sandusky abused him more than 100 times over four years starting in 1992, when he was 10.

Weaver, 30, sued Sandusky in Philadelphia last fall using the name John Doe.

After the trial started June 11, jurors had been allowed to return at the end of the day to their central Pennsylvania homes during the seven days of testimony.

Now, the seven-woman, five-man jury — and two remaining alternates — will stay in separate hotel rooms until a verdict is reached. The alternates are sequestered in a different hotel than the other jurors. When they are brought into the courthouse, they are shielded from public view.

By Friday afternoon, jurors had been deliberating more than 12 hours.

If the jury needs to contact anyone while deliberating, attendants stationed outside the courtroom will pass along the message. Attendants will also bring food, water or any evidence jurors request.

If any juror is suspected of talking about the case with anyone, Cleland asked other members of the jury to report it so he can investigate and potentially replace them.

Once there is a verdict, it will be up to each juror if he or she wants to speak with reporters, or anyone, about their decision. The tablets they have used to take notes will be destroyed.

___

Matheson reported from Philadelphia. Associated Press freelance writer Paige Minemyer in Bellefonte contributed.

News from © The Associated Press, 2012
The Associated Press

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