To kind of sum up the response to multiple people....Person A didn't commit a crime and didn't witness one, but still reported it to his supervisors immediately. That's what supervisors are for. He's a football coach. He isn't their cop, social worker, lead investigator, and all-around McGuyver man too.
That doesn't capture what I was getting at, at all.
JoePa is (or was, since he'll never coach again) a leader of young men. Not professionals, but men barely out of adolescence. The expectations of such a guy (especially a former bastion of honor and integrity like JoePa) are much different than the expectations of a guy like Larry Riley or Joe Lacob, or whoever their human resources person is.
To highlight the differences, its like comparing a high school football coach to a small business owner.
That said, JoePa knew what happened, and if he didn't know what happened in its entirety, its because he willfully chose not to discover the truth, hoping it would go away, or in the least be taken care of by someone else.
And that response, especially from a guy in JoePa's position with so much to lose is completely rational in a legal sense. He did as little as he possibly could have to absolve himself of criminal negligence. But, it fails to pass the moral smell test for a leader of young men, and that's why JoePa should not be allowed to coach anymore. His lack of action helped to enable an environment where these abuses could continue. Not legally, but what's legal and what's right are different things.
Now, let's go look at Monta Ellis. He (at the time of this post) is being accused of passing on lewd and graphic photos (one assumes in the form of text messages) to an adult woman without her consent. We will have to wait to see the severity, but let's even assume it was pretty bad, and happened often.
Someone in the Golden State front office should lose their job, and someone will. Obviously they don't have enough to press criminal charges, so obviously there will be no criminal repercussions.
It doesn't make what Monta Ellis did right, and if this bears out to be true, he should absolutely lose a part of the season. You shouldn't be allowed to harass a woman without consequence.
Monta Ellis may actually have harassed someone. One guy loses their job forever. The other guy we don't know yet. If the standard for losing your job and being vilified like the new Gaddafi is knowing someone is accused of something, then it has to be against everyone, not just 80 year old men with otherwise rock solid careers. Right?
Well, again you're equating what Ellis did and what JoePa did. I think that's a non-starter.
Let's take out the word "McQueery" and insert "Brady". Then let's take out the word "Paterno" and insert the word "Bill Belichik". Let's take out the word "Curley" and insert the word "Jonathan Kraft".
Now how does WEEI react? And ESPN? And Celtics Blog. Let's see now. Let's think really hard about it. Hmmm. Do you think they'd say Brady and Belichik can never do their jobs again?
I sure as heck hope so.