Attorneys for the administrators say they’re still reviewing thousands of documents containing millions of pages that may be relevant to the case — and that they expect even more of such evidence to come in subject to subpoenas and the discovery process. That’s a pretrial phase when the prosecution must turn over its evidence to the defense.
Schultz’s attorney, Thomas Farrell, says a Penn State subpoena has produced nine batches of computerized documents, the last being 60 gigabytes. Farrell says that’s the equivalent of 1.2 million pages.
A spokesman for the attorney general’s office, which is prosecuting the case, didn’t immediately return a call.