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Wife: Nothing inappropriate between Sandusky, boys

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“They were just standing ... in a hallway kind of thing ... they had their clothes on, they were fully clothed,” she said.

The psychologist, Elliot Atkins, told jurors that he diagnosed Sandusky with histrionic personality disorder after talking with the ex-coach for six hours.

People with the disorder often interact with others in inappropriately seductive ways and don’t feel comfortable unless they’re the center of attention, Atkins explained.

“Often these are people who did not have as much success in relationships – emotional or romantic – (and) relationships in life,” he said, responding to questions from Sandusky lawyer Joe Amendola.

According to the National Institutes of Health, histrionic personality disorder occurs more often in women than in men.

Sandusky’s attorney is hoping to convince jurors that the disorder could explain his client’s letters to the accuser known as Victim 4 and other interaction that prosecutors allege show his grooming of victims.

A prosecution psychologist, John Sebastian O’Brien II, however, testified that Sandusky was a man who juggled many tasks at once, something not akin to the disorder.

“I don’t see anything in any of that information to suggest he was a person with a personality disorder that caused him any problems,” O’Brien said.

Amendola also questioned two state police investigators about what details they shared during interviews with the alleged victims, in particular with Victim 4.

Amendola asked retired Cpl. Joseph Leiter if investigators told interviewees about others who had stepped forward.

“In some of our interviews ... we did tell them,” he said.

Asked why, Leiter said it was to let possible victims know they were not alone.

“Each of these accusers was very, very seriously injured, and very concerned, and we had told them — especially prior to going to the grand jury — that they wouldn’t be alone, that there were others,” Leiter said.

Leiter said that did not include sharing individual accusers’ recollections of abuse, such as specific sex acts.

“We never told them what anyone else had ever told us,” he said.

But Amendola later read Leiter portions of an interview transcript in which the investigator told the accuser that others had reported abuse that progressed to oral sex and rape.


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