This is the introduction to the Ryan Rittmeyer series. We will soon publish a series of new discoveries about the criminal Rittmeyer and how he participated in the false conviction of Jerry Sandusky.

Jerry Sandusky
Sandusky, 80, remains incarcerated in the Pennsylvania State Correctional Institute at Laurel Highlands.

Eight accusers sent him there, all of whom changed their stories, all had lawyers, and each collected from $1.5 million to $20 million for their yarns.
Ryan Rittmeyer, AKA “Victim 10” got $5.5 million for his perjury in the Sandusky case.
He has not spent all his money – yet. But he is well on his way.
Based on our preliminary investigation, Ryan Rittmeyer, born Feb. 27, 1987, continues to ruin lives, just like he did before he testi-lied in the Sandusky criminal trial in June, 2012.
In 2013, he settled with Penn State for $5.5 million. After his two lawyers, Matt Casey and Andrew Shubin, took out an estimated 40 percent for their contingency fees, Rittmeyer was left with about $3.1 million.
His life is one of leaving victims scattered behind, and is proof of Colludi’s moral in Pinocchio – stolen fruit never fructifies.
He made a decent victim in the Sandusky case – his criminal record by age 25 did not hurt him before the deceived jury. He merely spun his vicious crimes into Sandusky’s abuse, which made him do the crimes, including a savage beating of an elderly man to steal his knapsack, which he thought contained cash, but only had three books and a camera.
Ryan was always stupid. Heartless and brainless, as we shall see in this series.
He is perhaps best known for inventing the story that Sandusky abused him in Sandusky’s silver convertible.
He thought to hang Sandusky with that spicy fabrication, but with which we shall ultimately hang Rittmeyer, along with his friends Dustin Struble, Jason Simcisko, and the rest of the 20-something-year-old (now in their thirties) wolf pack that collaborated with that clever suborner of perjury—Joseph McGettigan, deputy attorney general, who could charm the corn right out of the husk and feed it to the porcine media as their daily swill.
But in this series, we are talking about one of McGettigan’s boys – one of his little, tiny babies – and if you were to believe the media – which would be in general an inadvisable thing to do – and extremely inadvisable in the Sandusky case – you would think Ryan Rittmeyer to be about 11 years old when he testified. He was 25.
All the Sandusky accusers are locked into an endless youth – sort of a Peter Pan with greedy intentions.
They were in their twenties, most of them (with two lying 18-year-olds sandwiched in), but they were portrayed as tiny tots diddled with and fellated and forced to fellate and anally raped by a grotesque raging, aging monster who did not exist.
Little Ryan was the last to the liar’s table – getting in late after talking to his friends Jason Simcisko (“Victim” 3) and Dustin Struble (“Victim” 7) who were in on the fix from months earlier and encouraged by the dumbest accuser – if we measure liars intelligence by their reward – Zach Konstas (“Victim” 6) – who got the smallest amount of any of the pack – a mere $1.5 million.

Poor stupid Zach Konstas. He was willing to lie like the rest of them, but his attorney and he were so dumb that they forgot to add more new stories after the trial to beef up the Penn State payouts. He only got $1.5 million. Rittmeyer who likely never spent a moment alone with Sandusky got more than three times what dumb Konstas got.
Don’t Forget Group Memory Therapy
It was a cozy group that finished off Sandusky, and I will say nothing about their group conspiracy therapy, where they all met under the supervision of the corrupt Cindy MacNab, the quack psychologist, to decide what “memories” they suddenly recalled to tell Penn State about what Sandusky did to them.
A True Louse
But Ryan was among the worst. He loved to hurt people. He was born without a heart.
During the Sandusky case and afterwards, at the sentencing, he piled on good. He was good with his sanctimonious tone about how his life was ruined. Projection comes easy to a cad like Rittmeyer – for a fee of $5.5 million – less $2.4 for his righteous attorneys – who will assure you that they did it not for money, but only to stop Sandusky from doing it to other poor “victims.”
They stopped Sandusky, alright. They put him in prison and shut down his Second Mile – a charity that had served thousands of kids, but not all of them so ruthless as Ryan Rittmeyer.
In our series, Ocean City Remembers Ryan Rittmeyer, we will explore some of the people he hurt. Rittmeyer is emblematic of the kind of accusers who put the innocent Jerry Sandusky in prison for life. But rest assured, they won’t get away with their crimes.
I am going to try to put the Rittmeyer series up as fast as I can. Our audience keeps growing, and there is a thirst to discover how such an American miscarriage of justice – it has perhaps no equal since the Salem Witch Trials (though some of the fugitive slave trials might qualify) – could occur in plain sight. I say I will put these up fast, so I will number them. This is Ocean City Remembers Rittmeyer #1. I am eager to get on to Brett Swisher Houtz – that champion of liars and all the rest.
This is the Penn State Perjury Scandal, where perjury passed as truth and innocence was guilt.

