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“hard for me to see exactly what i look like”

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Penn State has spent $59.7 million on costs related to the scandal involving Jerry Sandusky, who was convicted of child abuse.

Penn State is paying the sum to 26 young men over claims of child abuse at the hands of former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky.

The school said 23 deals are fully signed and three are agreements in principle, but did not disclose the names of the recipients. The school faces six other claims, and the university says it believes some of those do not have merit while others may produce settlements.

University president Rodney Erickson issued a statement calling the announcement a step forward for victims and the school.

“We cannot undo what has been done, but we can and must do everything possible to learn from this and ensure it never happens again at Penn State,” said Rodney Erickson, who announced the day Jerry Sandusky was convicted in June 2012 of 45 criminal counts that Penn State was determined to compensate his victims.

The settlements have been unfolding since mid-August, when attorneys for the accusers began to disclose them. Penn State followed a policy in which it has not been confirming them, waiting instead to announce deals at once.

Penn State has spent $59.7 million on costs related to the scandal involving Jerry Sandusky

Penn State has spent $59.7 million on costs related to the scandal involving Jerry Sandusky

Harrisburg lawyer Ben Andreozzi, who helped negotiate several of the settlements, said his clients were satisfied.

“They felt that the university treated them fairly with the economic and noneconomic terms of the settlement,” said Ben Andreozzi, who also represents some others who have come forward recently. Those new claims have not been presented to the university, he said.

Penn State has spent more than $50 million on other costs related to the Sandusky scandal, including lawyers’ fees, public relations expenses, and adoption of new policies and procedures related to children and abuse complaints.

It said Monday that liability insurance is expected to cover the payments and legal defense, and expenses not covered should be paid from interest paid on loans by Penn State to its self-supporting units.

Jerry Sandusky, 69, has been pursuing appeals while he serves a 30- to 60-year state prison sentence.

He was convicted of abusing 10 boys, some of them at Penn State facilities. Eight young men testified against him.

Jerry Sandusky did not testify at his trial but has long asserted his innocence. He has acknowledged he showered with boys but insisted he never molested them.

The abuse scandal rocked Penn State, bringing down football coach Joe Paterno and leading college sports’ governing body, the NCAA, to levy unprecedented sanctions against the university’s football program.

Three former Penn State administrators await trial in Harrisburg on charges they engaged in a criminal cover-up of the Sandusky scandal. Former president Graham Spanier, retired vice president Gary Schultz and retired athletic director Tim Curley deny the allegations, and a trial date has not been scheduled.

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Connie Culp was the first person to receive a face transplant in the U.S in 2008, after her top lip, nose, roof of her mouth, one eye and both cheeks were destroyed by then husband Tom Culp, who brutally shot her in the face after flying into a rage.

Now, Connie Culp, 48, from Ohio, has bravely decided to talk about the domestic abuse and terrible shooting she endured at the hands of the man she says she still loves.

Her decision to speak out comes as her 52 year-old husband was last week released from prison after serving just seven years for the horrific crime.

Connie Culp was the first person to receive a face transplant in the U.S in 2008, after her top lip, nose, roof of her mouth, one eye and both cheeks were destroyed by then husband Tom Culp, who brutally shot her in the face after flying into a rage

Connie Culp was the first person to receive a face transplant in the U.S in 2008, after her top lip, nose, roof of her mouth, one eye and both cheeks were destroyed by then husband Tom Culp, who brutally shot her in the face after flying into a rage

Describing the moment her life changed forever, Connie Culp said:

“I remember everything. That’s what the doctors can’t believe.

“I remember him lifting the gun, and what he said to me, and then firing.

“It’s an image that will never leave me, for the rest of my life. It’s the moment everything changed forever.”

As well as suffering horrific facial disfigurement, Connie Culp was also left almost totally blind in the 2004 attack at the bar in Hopedale, Ohio, which the couple owned and ran together.

The signs, she says, were there before Tom Culp attempted to take her life.

“He only hit me a couple of times ever. It was the bullying that was worse. “Maybe it was a warning for things to come, but I never imagined what eventually happened was even possible.”

But, despite everything her ex-husband has done, Connie Culp says she still loves him.

“I’ll probably always love him because he’s the father of my kids,” admitted Connie Culp, who has two children with Tom.

“But I can’t handle being around him.”

She recently returned to the bar for the first time in eight years since that awful night when Tom Culp snapped.

“He was jealous because everyone seemed to like me so much,” Connie Culp revealed.

“It wasn’t really men. I was popular with the girls who worked with us and most of the customers.

“I think it just used to make him jealous. And money was tight with the bar. We owned it together and it used to put a strain on us.

“Sometimes he used to break things in the house when he’d get mad. Sometimes my things, like a trophy I’d won in a karate tournament.

“And then that night something just snapped. We were at the bar and he was mad. Then he just got his shotgun and shot me.”

It’s important to Connie Culp to appear like she’s coping.

“It’s the way I keep going,” she said.

“I don’t want people to feel sorry for me. I want to be treated the same as I was my whole life, before the shooting.

“If I dwell on the past I’ll have no life to live.”

After shooting his wife, Tom Culp put the gun in his mouth and pulled the trigger causing severe injuries to himself. But, like Connie, he survived.

“It was all just a waste,” Connie Culp said.

“He’s never acknowledged what he did. He just blames it on everyone else.”

After the shooting in September 2004, Connie Culp spent months in hospital as surgeons repeatedly tried to fix the damage caused by the gun blast.

Connie Culp before the horrific attack in 2004

Connie Culp before the horrific attack in 2004

Connie Culp before face transplant in 2008

Connie Culp before face transplant in 2008

 

Connie Culp after face transplant in 2011

Connie Culp after face transplant in 2011

With her children Steven, 30, and Alicia, 28 at her side, Connie Culp battled on, always taking comfort in the miracle that she had survived.

Connie Culp even visited her husband in prison to comfort him. But despite her unshakable determination to forgive, the events had changed things forever.

“I knew then it was over,” she said.

“I haven’t shaken that badly since he shot me. I can drink four pots of coffee and not shake. But around him I couldn’t control it.”

Chillingly, Tom Culp even got angry with the mother of his children for telling the truth to the police about the shooting.

“Tom said: <<I wouldn’t have told on you>> and I said <<I wouldn’t have shot you>>,” Connie Culp said.

“He’s mad because I make jokes about it,” she added. “How do you think I’m going to get through this?”

Anxious about her husband potential release this month, Connie Culp finally made their divorce official in May and moved out of the home they shared in Bloomingdale, Ohio, in her bid to move on.

“He’ll probably move back into the old house,” Connie Culp said.

“His family still own it. He has a restraining order but nobody knows what he’ll do.

“We’ll just have to wait and see.”

As well as her husband, Connie Culp also had to endure children reacting to her damaged face with horror.

“Children would say I was a monster,” she said.

“They didn’t mean anything by it. They were just being kids, but it made me feel worried.

“I got through it by just trying to look at the brighter side of things. I was alive, and I had my children and grandchildren.”

After all she had been through, Connie Culp was eventually put on the face transplant waiting list in October 2008 at the highly prestigious Cleveland Clinic, Ohio.

Dr. Chad Gordon, one of eight surgeons involved in the procedure, said:

“The problems were that we needed a deceased woman from the local area, so that we could get the donor’s face to Connie.

“We needed someone from her age group and of the same blood type, and one who was registered as a donor.

‘In the U.S., not many people sign to be donors, so the odds of finding a match were always slim.”

But on December 10, 2008, just two months later, the team were shocked when they found a match.

A local woman – whose family Connie Culp has now met – had died from a heart attack. It was a chance of giving Connie what she had waited more than four years for.

Calling her to tell her to race to the clinic, Dr. Chad Gordon reminded Connie Culp the procedure could end her life.

“I already had one miracle by surviving the shooting,” Connie Culp said.

“So I thought someone up there might have another one for me.”

The medical team, led by top surgeon Dr. Maria Siemionow at the Cleveland Clinicbattled for over 20 hours to attach her new face.

Doctors hollowed out the damaged section of her face before replacing it with the donor’s which they harvested using a hand-drawn template and plastic model of Connie Culp’s face to guide them.

This entire bone segment – with the donor’s face attached – was raised in one large piece and included both cheek bones, a new upper jaw, a new palate, portions of both orbits, and some donor teeth.

While the transplant has improved things, Connie Culp knows her serious medical battle will last the rest of her life.

“Everyone assumes you’re better and forgets about it after the transplant. I hope to show the world that this isn’t the case for people like me.

“You still have to fight and live with the memories of why you needed one every day.”

A nurse visits Connie Culp three times a week to check her health and make sure her body isn’t rejecting her new face.

Each day Connie Culp also takes a cocktail of prescription drugs to help her body cope.

With a tiny amount of sight left in her left eye, she struggles to see and finds it hard to do most daily tasks alone.

But Connie Culp has a number of techno gadgets to get by.

“A talking pill box in my bedroom tells me when it’s time to take my medicine and dispenses the right doses,” she said.

“My talking alarm clock lets me know what the time is every hour, and a clothes scanner tells me what colours my outfits are, so I don’t mismatch.

“Otherwise I’d be going out with odd socks on.”

Connie Culp also walks with a cane, while her local shopkeepers help her to choose the right brands of food.

A document magnifier helps Connie Culp to see her old family photographs of happier times, and read letters and bills.

And after taking her medicine each day, Connie Culp carefully applies her makeup, staring at her reflection in her bathroom mirror.

“Now I can go out and hold my head up high. It’s improved my looks so much. It’s hard for me to see exactly what I look like because I can see only shapes really, with no definition.

“I know it’s not my face, but I feel thankful that I have one now.”

Connie Culp enjoys a new love of life, playing with 4 year-old grandson Maddox, and spending time with her children Steven and Alicia, who helps with work around the house.

The attack and face transplant has given Connie Culp a new love of life and she enjoys playing with her grandson Maddox, with help from daughter Alicia

The attack and face transplant has given Connie Culp a new love of life and she enjoys playing with her grandson Maddox, with help from daughter Alicia

Connie Culp regularly tries one of the exercises she needs to perform to keep her face adapting.

“I hold a toothbrush between for my lips for as long as I can but I can only do a few seconds.”

“It’s the little things that are my goals. I want to be able to drink a milkshake through a straw again. But I haven’t got enough strength.

“Smiling is also tough. I can do angry when Maddox is being naughty, but I want him to see me smile too. That’s another goal.

“They say it takes more muscles to frown than it does to smile, so I don’t know why so many people walk around frowning all the time. They should just smile because it’s less work.”

Connie Culp’s other goals have involved helping others. She attends conventions as an ambassador and promotes organ donation, which made her life bearable again.

“If my work can raise the number of donors and get transplant for others, then that would be a good thing.”

Connie Culp’s fighting spirit has earned her admiration from around the world.

“I was given a miracle when I survived the shooting,”she said. ” Then I got a second miracle when I survived the face transplant.”

“It’s still tough, but my life is so much better now.”