"The biggest secret that I had kept:" Adopted, abused Jerry Sandusky's son shares his story

Monday, October 7, 2019
"The biggest secret that I had kept:" Adopted, abused Jeff Sandusky's son shares his story
The adopted son of convicted child molester and former Penn State University assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky is sharing his story of abuse.

Salt Lake City, UT -- Matt Sandusky, the adopted son of convicted child molester and former Penn State University assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky, is sharing his story of abuse.

"This was the biggest secret that I had kept for 33 years of my life. I didn't want one single person knowing," Matt Sandusky admitted, before opening up about the sexual abuse he said the infamous coach put him through.

Matt told ABC4 he suffered at the hands of his father from the ages of eight to 17,

"I was drug-addicted, alcohol addicted, at 11, 12-years-old, trying to cope. I burned myself. At 17 I attempted to take my life," he explained. "It was everything you could imagine a grown man sexually victimizing a young boy doing. I don't talk in detail about what I was forced to do and what he did, but you can use your imagination."

Matt said Jerry used his non-profit organization to not only provide help for at-risk children but to identify, target and groom the most vulnerable.

"Perpetrators put themselves in positions to be around children and put themselves in positions where people will trust them," Matt said. "They don't only groom the child, they groom the environment, they groom the families and they groom the communities to believe that they're something that they're not so they can operate in the shadows so to speak."

Child abuse is more prevalent than most people realize. According to the organization Darkness to Light, about one in 10 children will be sexually abused before their 18th birthday, and 90 percent of children who are victims of sexual abuse know their abuser.

Knowing the statistics, Matt is bringing awareness to this health epidemic.

"It is the number one health epidemic that we face as a country but we have no politician talking about that," Matt said. "It's important that we the people say enough is enough. Our children are far too important for this to happen to them anymore."