By Mark Shade
HARRISBURG, Pa., Feb 21 (Reuters) - Convicted child sex
offender Jerry Sandusky on Thursday took his appeal to the
Pennsylvania Superior Court in an attempt to overturn a jury
verdict that found him guilty of abusing 10 boys.
The former Penn State football coach is serving a 30- to
60-year sentence for sexually abusing boys he targeted through a
charity he founded for at-risk youth.
The judge who oversaw his trial, John Cleland of the Court
of Common Pleas, denied Sandusky's initial appeal on Jan. 30.
At the time, Sandusky and his attorneys, Joe Amendola and
Norris Gelman, said there were seven reasons why an appeal
should be granted, including that they did not have enough time
to prepare for an adequate defense.
Cleland denied the appeal on all points.
In his newest "Notice of Appeal" to the state's Superior
Court, Amendola did not list the reasons for Sandusky's request
for the verdict to be overturned.
The Pennsylvania Superior Court is one of two appellate
courts in the state. Most of the petitions it receives, the
court says on its website, are denied.
Sandusky, 69, a once-beloved defensive coordinator, was
convicted on 45 of 48 counts for preying on boys on and around
the university's main campus in State College, Pennsylvania.
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