Judges Sent Hundreds Of Teens To Private Detention Centers In Exchange For Millions
Two Pennsylvania judges were sued in federal court this past week for allegedly taking $2.6 million in kickbacks from private juvenile detention facilities. In exchange, they sentenced hundreds of youths to the centers over the past 5 years. One of the judges, Mark Ciavarella, sent 1 out of 4 defendants to the centers, compared to a statewide rate of 1 in 10.
Judge Michael Conahan is accused of securing the contracts from PA Child Care's former owner, Robert Powell, while Judge Ciavarella did the dirty work of keeping the private facilities well-stocked with new wards.
With Judge Conahan serving as president judge in control of the budget and Judge Ciavarella overseeing the juvenile courts, they set the kickback scheme in motion in December 2002, the authorities said.
They shut down the county-run juvenile detention center, arguing that it was in poor condition, the authorities said, and maintained that the county had no choice but to send detained juveniles to the newly built private detention centers.
Prosecutors say the judges tried to conceal the kickbacks as payments to a company they control in Florida.
Both men pleaded guilty to fraud on Thursday, and if the plea is accepted by the court, they'll spend 87 months in prison, be forced to resign from the bench and the bar, and lose their pension benefits.
Separately, plaintiffs in the federal suits are also suing the former and current owners of PA Child Care, as well as the owner of the construction company that built the detention centers. The feds, on the other hand, have said they're not targeting PA child Care in their corruption probe, which has been under new ownership since last summer.
Update: Chatterboxwriting points out that the local paper for the area has an entire section devoted to covering the scandal.
"Judges Plead Guilty in Scheme to Jail Youths for Profit" [New York Times]
"2 Pa. judges sued in $2.6M kickback scheme" [Associated Press]
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Comments:
@Davan: The child care facilities aren't even being prosecuted (I'm from the county this happened in, and everyone is all shook up about it). These judges have been corrupt for years - they refused to lay off people they had hired (outside of normal hiring guidelines), so there was a lawsuit to freeze hiring and get back within the 2009 budget. Civiarella hired his son-in-law as a probation officer and also gave others raises with no input from other judges or court personnel.
They needed to cut 2.1 million from the budget, and as soon as Conahan and Civiarella got ousted, they were able to cut 2.8 million by furloughing at least ten probation officers (including the son-in-law) and reducing the salaries of three people who had been given raises without approval.
We're going to be seeing the effects of this for a long time in our county.
@Trai_Dep: Although, the corrupt judges did miss out on mandatory 24/7 live feeds for the children, thus ruining syndication chances for Caged Teens In Heat: Florida. So I guess they weren't as entrepreneurial as they thought.
@Trai_Dep: They owned a company in Florida that got the kickbacks.
And this kind of sleasy crap just seems so much more Florida and Pennsylvania.
@Eyebrows McGee: So it's okay that I think they should serve at least a year for each victim who was fraudulently put away, consecutively, with no chance of parole? Because that's how I feel this morning. Last night I was thinking of meaner punishments, but I've cooled off a little.
@mgy: The actions of these judges defraud not only the victims, but the entire court. Their punishments should be automatically doubled.
@Chris Walters: That seems fair, I was thinking the judges (and the people running the facilities) should be charged with false imprisonment and kidnapping.
@Possinator: People from the construction company were the ones who arranged the kickbacks with the judges. Our local paper has a whole section of articles related to the investigation if you want to read more details.
Wth do you expect from the mantra to privatize government functions. Time and time again, this happens. Blackwater, Halliburton, KBR, Peanut Corp of America (they ordered the tests, not the FDA). Does anyone else need more convincing that the Republican Agenda is simply bad for America? I don't want to hear about government waste, fraud and abuse, when you have multi-million dollar corporate CEOs with an utter lack of accountability being bailed out by our tax dollars.
@Chris Walters: I don't want to sound maudlin, but I love our legal system and I believe in what it stands for. It's flawed as all get out, but it's among the best in the world and in so many ways it's the expression of our best instincts to fairness, justice, protection of the weak, etc.
So these ABSOLUTE JACKHOLES piss me off because not only did they DESTROY CHILDREN'S LIVES (which alone is worth some serious ass-kickery), but they shit on the system they were sworn to serve. They used it to play God with people's lives, and they did it for money. That's sick, that's wrong, and I'd start the punishment by letting everyone in Pennsylvania with a JD kick them in the testicles. Consecutively.
@chatterboxwriting: I know, thats why I would like to see it. I'm sick and tired of people getting away with this crap. The world will never be fair.. but I wonder sometimes what it would be like if it were
Actually,
There are two seperate papers in Wilkes-Barre. The Citizens Voice actually broke the story initially.
http://www.citizensvoice.com/judges/
The paper you're linking is generally re-hashing the other paper's journalism.
@linlu:
Both of these judges are DEMOCRATS. No mention of that by the NY Times--how surprising. NOT.
@linlu: Your slam on the Republican party clearly shows your bias and ignorance. Both judges are democrats. [newsbusters.org]
@buckfutt: I think they didn't mention it because it's not supposed to be relevant. Yes, we all know it's silly to think that judges don't have political bias, but the fact is they're supposed to be impartial on the bench, so most don't emphasize their political leanings when campaigning or otherwise. That may be why the story didn't focus on it.
@rbb: linlu wasn't referring to the judges' political affiliation, but the Republican agenda that lets the marketplace solve all the problems in the world. This is yet another example of how well that works.
If you think the party affiliation of these two crooks wouldn't have been identified in the very first line if they were Republicans, you haven't been reading the New York Times for very long.
Great, let's put government bureaucrats in charge of everything. That worked out really well for the Soviets.
Oh, wait...
Oh, thank god they're Democrats. I knew all republicans were angels and all democrats were crooks. Oh wait, maybe it's the other way around. Oh wait, MAYBE both sides have dishonest people AND both sides have honest people? Could that be possible?!
Or we could point fingers at political parties instead of where they belong: at the damn judges. These guys are sleazeballs I don't care what party they belong to. They are greedy people, no matter what affiliation.
@Eyebrows McGee: I think it's horrible that you would exclude licensed paralegals from the ball-kicking fest.
See, not only did these pantloads send kids to juvie, they planned ahead. They destroyed the existing, public-run juvenile detention system and replaced it with an expensive private system just so they could put this scheme in place.
It seems like in every other issue of Reader's Digest there is a "That's Outrageous!" piece or a story on corrupt judges. They have all this power and they can't be touched. That isn't right. If they are corrupt, they need to be removed IMMEDIATELY. It seems like in a lot of cases, it takes a giant crowbar and 50,000 sumo wrestlers to get their fat asses off the bench!
Don't bend over for the soap, suckholes!!!
Eyebrows McGee: I can't wait to use "absolute jackholes" in conversation. That was great! LOL!!
@Michael Smith: Agreed. And that's my hometown. And I'm so...uh, proud.
/sarcasm
I have to say that I'm truly not surprised. This type of scenario is FAR too common in the Wilkes-Barre area, though. The nepotism and old-boy networks there are intricately woven into everyday life & politics.
@mythago: The more the merrier! Paralegals, legal secretaries, court clerks -- everyone came come to the testicle-kicking party!
@linlu: Keep drinking the kool-aid. This shows how the liberal mind works. I bet this is Bush's fault somehow.
Maybe I'm at the harsher end of the spectrum, maybe I watch too many old movies, but perhaps we should bring back Public Hangings? However, only for politicians and etc. I mean, these judges ruined the lives of several youths and they get to live? They should be put to death in a shameful manner and stripped of any honor. The same should be done to Senators and that Chicago Governor found taking bribes. Bury them face down in shame.
Yes, I know, it sounds extremely barbaric, but I will guarantee you that Political corruption would be near to non existent in America if it meant a short drop and a sudden stop.
In case people aren't aware of the fact: the United States has the highest incarceration rate in the world, in both per capita figures as well as total number of inmates. We jail people at a higher rate than freedom-loving countries like Cuba, Russia, or China.
This is due in no small part to the many parties who have a financial interest in locking up as many people as possible for as long as possible: everyone from for-profit prison operators to prison guard unions. Likewise, it's a sad comment on our society that many rural towns count on state or federal prisons as their primary employer.
@buckfutt: It doesn't matter what political party they belong to, it's irrelevant and you're just childishly trying to make democrats look bad. Pfft, they don't help BTW.
Libertarian, baby!
@aphex242: Crooks punishing crooks >:o
I would love to stop paying taxes because I don't support the bailout but then I would get arrested by the crooks taking my money to give to the crooked banks.
Welcome to America! Now grab your ankles!
@mgy: I think 7 years in prison is a pretty hefty sentence. I would hope that they are not eligible for parole during that time though. Also, I would hope that they are no longer eligible to hold any public office.
chatterboxwriting, it's good to know someone local frequents consumerist. I am shocked to see this story here, as I am in Luzerne County as well. I personally know the Ciavarella family and am not surprised at all. Growing up, people were afraid of Mark as a judge. Juveniles knew that if he was the sentencing judge in a case, they were screwed, that he gave harsher punishments than any other judge in the county.
See what "privatizing" traditional services does? Where I live on Wilmington Island, GA the fire service is privatized and it you don't pay them 250 bucks a year they will watch your home burn down. Social services like police protection, fire protection, education, road construction and improvements, jails, water treatment, sewage is socialized and works pretty damn good. Guess what would happen if you had to pay for all these services piece by piece instead of through one tax? Corruption (more than you see now), monopolization and the rich getting the benefits and the middle class and poor shut out unless they pay up. We need community minded spirit, not "me-first-screw-you" mentality.



















this is so despicable that words fail me.