AP/ October 8, 2012, 10:18 AM

What Jerry Sandusky can expect in Pa. prison

This April 13, 2010 file photo shows a corrections officer looking out from a tower at the state prison in Camp Hill, Pa.

This April 13, 2010 file photo shows a corrections officer looking out from a tower at the state prison in Camp Hill, Pa. / AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster

HARRISBURG, Pa. Jerry Sandusky will walk into state prison with little more than a watch and wedding band. He'll be able to work a 30-hour week to make a few dollars. He'll be able to watch Penn State football but not violent movies.

If the former Penn State defensive coach is sentenced Tuesday to a long state prison term, he will find himself far removed from the comfortable suburban life he once led, placed under the many rules and regulations of the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections.

Even Sandusky's own attorney believes that whatever sentence he gets, at age 68 Sandusky will likely live out his days inside a state prison. Prison officials, written policies and former offenders provided a detailed look to The Associated Press about the regimented life behind bars that Sandusky faces.

Sandusky has been housed in isolation inside the Centre County Correctional Facility in Bellefonte since his conviction in June on 45 counts of child sexual abuse, and he has spent his days reading and writing, preparing a statement for sentencing and working out twice a day, defense attorney Joe Amendola said.

"Jerry is a very likable guy — he gets along with everybody," Amendola said last week, as he worked with Sandusky to help get his affairs in order, including a power of attorney and updated will. "He's a model inmate. He doesn't cause problems, he's sociable, he's pleasant."

Assuming Judge John Cleland gives him at least two years — the minimum threshold for a state prison sentence — Sandusky's first stop will be the Camp Hill state prison near Harrisburg, where all male inmates undergo a couple weeks of testing to determine such things as mental and physical health, education level and any treatment needs.

Prison officials will assign him a security level risk and decide which "home prison" to send him to.

Although Sandusky's home in the Lemont area of State College is only a couple miles from Rockview state prison, there is no way to predict where he will end up.

Older inmates sometimes end up at Laurel Highlands, which can better treat more severe medical problems, or Waymart, a comparatively lower-security prison in the state's northeastern corner.

The roughly 6,800 sex offenders are scattered throughout the prison system, which has no special units for them. Treatment is available for sex offenders, and those who hope to be paroled must participate.

"My guess is he'll wind up in a minimum-security facility, and probably a facility for nonviolent people," Amendola said.

A convicted sex offender who spent 10 years in prison, and who works with other released sex offenders through the Pennsylvania Prison Society, said Sandusky won't be able to keep a low profile.

"You can have some control over how obscure you are as a prisoner," said the 52-year-old man from the Philadelphia suburbs, who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because of the stigma attached to sex offenses. "You can either make yourself standout, or you can stay closer to the woodwork. There's no hiding that man."

The state will provide him with clothes, shoes and bedding, and the first set of toiletries. He'll be able to bring a wedding ring without gemstones, a basic watch worth $50 or less, eyeglasses and dentures. Sandusky uses a machine for sleep apnea and takes medications.


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SpeakPeace says:
Gee...I wonder why he has Sleep Apnea? Could it be he's unable to sleep from the guilt of regularly molesting children. Denial in the daytime, but once the lites go out and your head hits the pillow, it gets awfully quiet....
jus sayin'
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djseavy says:
The real sad part is that he will likely be viewed as a celebrity. That happens in cases of the mighty when they fall. He's a con artist, and will be in his own element, so he'll have plenty of time to practice his chosen profession of manipulating those weaker than him. I predict he'll end up in some cushy prison after the initial intake, and because he is so good at manipulating and conning, he'll probably be in his own cell. Put it this way: either it's going to be pure hell for him or he'll be carried on a platter. There's little middle ground.
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brasileira2 says:
"He's a model inmate. He doesn't cause problems, he's sociable, he's pleasant."

He better, or he'll get it up the rear.
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brasileira2 says:
He went from Penn to the Pen.
Well deserved!
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ssporleder says:
It sickens me to hear anyone say anything nice about a man that abused CHILDREN.

He is going to get a better lifestyle than most of us have, for again, abusing CHILDREN.
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enaid3 says:
Hope he can't sleep at night worrying about the big prison stud who's gonna be after him. Hope they gang bang him to death.
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matoka1234 says:
Well darn,I was hoping it would involve daily rape and beating. That's what he deserves.
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greennnnnn-2009 says:
He gets to wear a watch and wedding ring? Not in MY state, he wouldn't. Poor dude. Screw him.
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