Fair
50°
Morris, IL
Fair|Forecast »

Sandusky’s wife defends him, trashes son in letter to judge

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

“We have forgiven him many times for all he has done to our family, thinking that he was changing his life,” she wrote. “But he would always go back to stealing and lies.”

During the run-up to his father’s trial, Matt, one of the Sandusky family’s six adopted children, had denied on several occasions that he had ever been abused, and he originally agreed to testify for the former coach’s defense.

But hours after jurors began deliberating Jerry Sandusky’s fate, the 33-year-old’s attorneys dropped a bombshell, publicly disclosing that their client had turned state’s witness and was now alleging his own abuse.

Though he never testified at trial, Matt Sandusky explained his motivation in a taped interview with investigators leaked to the news media in June.

“I came forward for different reasons,” he said. “I mean, for my family, so that they can really have closure and see what the truth actually is.”

But which family he was referring to remains unclear.

Matt Sandusky was born Matt Heichel, and first met Jerry Sandusky as an 8-year-old foster child with a troubled home life. He moved into the former coach’s home nine years later and was formally adopted at the age of 18. He has not yet stated publicly when his adoptive father allegedly began to sexually abuse him.

Matt Sandusky’s biological mother, Debra Long, suspected something suspicious early on in the relationship.

Jerry Sandusky took an interest in her son the same way many of the former coach’s other accusers would later describe. They met at The Second Mile, the charity from which the elder Sandusky culled all of his victims. They attended football games and worked out together.

“I would sit back and watch when Jerry would show up, how excited Matt was,” Long told ABC News in an interview last November. “And then, as time went on, I would watch the same kid hide behind the bedroom door and say, ‘Mom, tell him I’m not home.’ ”

Matt moved in with the Sanduskys after burning down a barn in 1995. But his trouble seemed to grow worse there, according to his interview with investigators.

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all