A sex assault victim was told to apologize to Jerry Sandusky, his alleged abuser, and another Pennsylvania State University official after reporting the assault in the late 1980s, according to court documents released Tuesday.

"You're gonna apologize to coach," John Doe 102 said he was told after he brought the alleged incident to the attention of adults responsible for his safety. Sandusky and former athletic director Jim Tarman were standing 15 feet away at the time, he said.

At the time of the assault, John Doe 102 was living in Nittany House, a nonprofit sanctuary for troubled teen boys as an alternative to placement at the Centre County Juvenile Detention Center.

John Doe 102's deposition was released Tuesday as part of a trove of court records outlining allegations that preceded the already known Sandusky sex abuse cases by decades. The latest victim was reportedly assaulted in either 1987 or 1988, based on his year of birth.

The document, released in a partial and redacted form, does not outline the details of the alleged assault. John Doe 102, however, mentions a "golf course" in conjunction with the assault. Penn State opened and expanded two golf courses, beginning in 1926.

In the deposition, John Doe 102 said the incident occurred at about 10 p.m., but he could not find an adult to report it to until early the next morning. He initially told a female official at the Nittany House, who in turn brought his allegations to the project coordinator, Clifford Gordon.

The site of the Nittany House, where John Doe 102 was forced to confront his alleged abuser, Jerry Sandusky.

Prior to bringing him to Gordon, she warned the victim that he could face repercussions for having sneaked out of the facility the night before. She also filed a report, cited by the attorney leading the deposition, in which she reportedly wrote that "they tried to poke holes in my story."

From the beginning of his encounter with Gordon, John Doe 102 said, he felt that authorities believed he was lying about the sexual assault.

"The guy went nuts," the victim said, noting that the project coordinator yelled at him throughout the encounter.

"I always thought he didn't like me," he said, of Gordon. "But I would later come to realize I don't think he liked anybody there or his job, and I think that that guy would have poked holes in anybody's story to cover his own [expletive]."

In addition to berating the victim for having snuck out of the facility, Gordon reportedly asked the teen whether he planned to tell his mother or anyone else about the alleged assault.

"At some point, it got to the point of, well, 'you're lying'," John Doe 102 said. "We never -- definitely didn't get into details that were here, you know, about that, but it was -- I would say, yeah, they were definitely poking holes in my story."

After being questioned, the victim said he was told to sit in the dining room of the East Nittany Avenue facility, which currently houses the Nittany Co-Op, with his chair facing the wall.

"They gave me a chair and made me turn around and face the wall, seemingly as far away from that office as I could be while they talked," the victim said.

At some point during the time the victim was facing the wall, Sandusky and Tarman came to the facility. John Doe 102 said he didn't know how or when they arrived and he never directly spoke with them.

According to the report by the female official, whose name was redacted from the deposition released Tuesday, "Gordon told John Doe 102 to apologize to Sandusky and Tarman for telling lies, adding that, 'you're probably going to be moved from Nittany House'."

Being moved from Nittany House, John Doe 102 said, was tantamount to being transferred to the detention center, a "prison for juveniles."

The victim said he was sitting about 15 feet away as Gordon led the two Penn State officials out of Nittany House.

"Gordon said to me, 'you're gonna write a letter of apology'," John Doe 102 said, "and then he added about, the part about being moved, but he said, 'you're gonna get your [expletive] kicked out of the Nittany House."

In another document released Tuesday, Sandusky himself reportedly told a victim that "no one will believe you."

Gordon did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

In a 1989 article published by Penn State's student newspaper, The Daily Collegian, Gordon described Nittany House's goal of creating a stable environment for boys aged 12 to 18 years old who were ordered there for truancy or drug or alcohol abuse.

"Some of these kids have never been to the dentist," Gordon told the student newspaper.

Tarman's wife, Louise Tarman, said her husband has been in a health care facility for about five years and would not be able to comment.

Laurel Brandstetter, Tarman's attorney, noted that John Doe 102 wasn't sure that Tarman was at the Nittany House and said during the deposition that he "wouldn't testify under oath it was Jim Tarman."

"Ignoring allegations of child sexual abuse would be entirely inconsistent with the man his family knew," she said. "Throughout his career, Mr. Tarman was widely regarded as a highly principled person who could be counted on to do the right thing."

Once Sandusky and Tarman had left, the victim said Gordon and another individual whose name was redacted returned to the Nittany House office. Amid another volley of yelling, he said, "I walked over to the closet, I grabbed a coat that wasn't even mine, and just hauled [expletive]."

John Doe 102 left the facility at about 9 a.m. and never looked back.

"I ran the whole way until I reached campus because I thought for sure somebody would be chasing me," he said. "I'm putting myself back, as a 42-year-old man, in the thoughts of a 16-year-old, but at that time, it felt like there was no other reason; I just had to get the hell out of there, I had to. I didn't know where I was going, what I was gonna do, but I just had to get out."

At that moment, the victim said, he wanted to "put as much distance between that place and whoever mat be looking for me as possible."

Later on, in a heavily redacted passage, John Doe 102 was captured and sent to another facility.

No one ever followed up on his allegations of sexual assault, although he later brought it to the attention of other unnamed officials. He never wrote the apology letter to Sandusky and Tarman.

"The minute I walked out that door, their responsibility was [to] notify the police," John Doe 102 said. "And, as far as they were concerned, I'm sure I was not their problem anymore."

This article was updated to include additional comment from Laurel Brandstetter.

Wallace McKelvey may be reached at wmckelvey@pennlive.com. Follow him on Twitter @wjmckelvey. Find PennLive on Facebook.

The deposition can be read in its entirety below.

Penn State vs. PMA: Exhibit L by PennLive on Scribd