Judges Who Sent Kids to Detention Centers for Financial Kickbacks Ordered To Pay Over $200 Million
Former Judges Mark A. Ciavarella and Michael T. Conahan are now serving lengthy prison sentences for what became known as the "kids-for-cash" scandal.
For almost seven years, two Pennsylvania judges sent hundreds of children—some of them as young as 8 years old—to privately run juvenile detention centers in exchange for financial kickbacks. On Tuesday, Judge Christopher Conner ordered former Judges Mark A. Ciavarella and Michael T. Conahan to pay over $200 million in compensatory and punitive damages to their victims.
Starting in 2000, the pair sent children into juvenile detention for offenses as innocuous as jaywalking, petty theft, or truancy. In what became known as the "kids for cash" scandal, the children were sent to two privately run detention centers whose builder and co-owner paid the men $2.8 million, according to the Associated Press, over the course of the scheme.
According to testimony from plaintiffs during the class-action suit, many of the sentences the children received were staggering. One plaintiff, who was 16 at the time, was sentenced to 11 months for driving the wrong way down a one-way street without a license. Another girl, then only 10, was sent to detention for a schoolyard fight with no serious injuries. One child was sent to detention for stealing a Hershey bar, another for writing on a school window with a marker. Several plaintiffs testified that their sentences were based on entirely arbitrary means, such as the number of birds in a tree outside the courtroom or the number of buttons on a girl's blouse. One plaintiff was sentenced to an additional eight months in detention after Ciavarella instructed him to pick a sports team, and he picked the wrong one.
"The Luzerne County Court System failed us," said one unnamed plaintiff. "They [Ciavarella and Conahan] had abused their power and, in my opinion, should never see the daylight again. The scars of this scandal will continue to live with all of us. As a survivor, I can assure you the impact of this man's greed [will never] be over or forgotten."
According to CBS news, following the plot's discovery, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has thrown out 4,000 juvenile convictions between 2003 and 2008. However, many of the plaintiffs still suffer from mental health problems. Several children sent to detention by Ciavarella and Conahan have died by suicide or drug overdose in the years after their detention.
"Children and adolescents suffered unspeakable physical and emotional trauma at the hands of two judicial officers who swore by solemn oath to uphold the law," Judge Conner wrote in a memorandum on the ruling. "Ciavarella and Conahan abandoned their oath and breached the public trust. Their cruel and despicable actions victimized a vulnerable population of young people, many of whom were suffering from emotional issues and mental health concerns."
Unfortunately, it is unlikely that any of the plaintiffs will receive financial compensation for their unjust detentions as, according to the A.P., Ciavarella and Conahan are now serving lengthy prison sentences. Ciavarella was sentenced to 28 years in prison, and Conahan was sentenced to 17 years, though he was released to home confinement in 2020, citing COVID-19-related concerns.
Regardless, the ruling is considered "a huge victory" for the victims. Marsha Levick, a lawyer for the victims, told the A.P. that the ruling "recognizes the gravity of what the judges did to these children in the midst of some of the most critical years of their childhood and development."
The plaintiffs in this case "are the tragic human casualties of a scandal of epic proportions. The law is powerless to restore to plaintiffs the weeks, months, and years lost because of the actions of the defendants," wrote Conner. "But we hope that by listening to their experiences and acknowledging the depth of the damage done to their lives, we can provide them with a measure of closure and…ensure that their stories are never forgotten."
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Hope there is a Hell and these fucks burn for all eternity.
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I wonder how they determined the 17-year and 28-year sentences. I hope they tallied up all the juvenile sentences, but with 4000 thrown out, they should have been much longer.
I'm actually a bit curious how some of these cases ever ended up in a court room in the first place. Stealing a chocolate bar? Writing on a school window with a sharpie?
One presumes that in every instance, a cop must have been involved. Were these cops feeding the judges minor infraction cases? I can't imagine some of those even being brought before a judge in the first place under normal circumstances.
My bet is that it all goes back to a school where there were faculty on the take too.
I cannot help but be convinced that at least some of the judges who tried these cases were somehow complicit. Writing on a window with a marker? One swipe with rubbing alcohol and its gone. What HARM was done by these "criminals"?
It's OK. These were probably CIS male white kids from MAGA families. No punishment is too harsh, just for existing.
"Conahan was sentenced to 17 years, though he was released to home confinement in 2020, citing COVID-19-related concerns"
So...just like the rest of us then?
So they are ordered to pay 200 mil and the plaintiffs are unlikely to see financial compensation? I wonder what the plaintiffs lawyers are making.
Best I can tell, the real-estate people involved with the bribery had a separate suit brought against them that involved a large payout. I think you're right though that they're not likely to see much from the judges.
Looks like that was settled though. Trying to see if I can find their case. Might not have an opinion if they settled.
Oh, there's a whole wikipedia page on this:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kids_for_cash_scandal
So what's the sentence for the guy who paid them?
One plaintiff was sentenced to an additional eight months in detention after Ciavarella instructed him to pick a sports team, and he picked the wrong one.
That's pretty bad. Seems like that would be on the record too, and so incredibly obvious.
So, I went ahead and read a large chunk of the brief listed since I can't trust Reason. Seems to be pretty accurate. I think there is some implication here that he was paid per-child locked up, but that actually doesn't appear to be true best I can tell. He was bribed to help to get some juvenile detention facilities built. It seems all his lockups are either related to that, or just that he's a magnificent asshole.
The stories in there are really, really heinous. Also, apparently many of the kids waived an attorney. Never, ever do that folks. I'm not blaming the kids and families on this, I'm just saying don't make the mistake they did even with good judges.
In the judges defence all eagles fans are eighter in jail or about to be
The government should pay for this and pay hard.
"One plaintiff was sentenced to an additional eight months in detention after Ciavarella instructed him to pick a sports team, and he picked the wrong one."
How many people were in the court room that day? How many lawyers, bailiffs, secretaries and other agents of the state? How is it possible that they all sat their while a judge made a mockery of the justice system with such an absolutely crass and heartless joke.
Those judges should burn in hell, no doubt. But the government that enabled them and sat idly by watching as they perpetrated these injustices for years should also face justice.
Yeah, I was wondering that earlier. They're must be a record of these things. How did it go on so long?
Overt: You ask what is probably the key question in this.
This article makes me regret the death of local journalism. I think this is a more serious problem then is normally discussed.
Hrmmmm.
Mark Ciavarella - "In 1995, he ran for judge in Luzerne County on the Democratic ticket and was elected to a ten-year term. He was re-elected to a second ten-year term in 2005"
Michael T. Conahan - "After becoming Luzerne county's president judge running under the Democratic party"
Nothing to see here folks, move it along.
The penalties are inadequate. These assholes should be handed over to their victims to be dismembered.
-jcr
Weren't these judges smart enough to know you are supposed to set up a self serving foundation like most other politicians?
You mean like the Clintons.
Or the Trumps!
I recall an article not so long ago where Reason was bemoaning an exceptionally long sentence someone was given using "sentencing guidelines" as was required in that jurisdiction, the bemoaning was that the judge didn't have "discretion". Well folks, I've said it before and I'll say it again, You don't want judges having a lot of discretion. Yeah sometimes you'll find one or two who are responsible with it, but judges are just elevated lawyers so essentially garbage people who have no reservations about moral relativism when it suits their ends.
"A judge is a law student who grades his own papers." H.L. Mencken
Kids-for-cash was Epstein's nickname in college (and after).
Lived in NEPA when this went down. That area has ridiculous corruption. There was a scandal at a cop bar where a drunk cop attacked a guy and cops arrested the victim and tried to hang him out to dry.
They also put American cheese on pizza. Old Forge style is an abomination.
- - -
For almost seven years, two Pennsylvania judges sent hundreds of children—some of them as young as 8 years old—to privately run juvenile detention centers in exchange for financial kickbacks.
- - -
Why do we even have private jails ? Isn't this the one time government is supposed to be in charge of something ? I mean, we don't allow privatized police, why would we allow privatized jail ? Just to save a buck ?
And who on the private jail side went to prison for this ? These children have been damaged for life.
Any odds on whether any of the jailed kids, or their families, ever see a cent of this award?
Didn’t I see this on a Law & Order episode?
Government is just the things we do together...
I remember reading about this several years ago and wondered what would happen to those two rotten judges.
It's a pity there isn't a hell for the both of them to go.
To say that people have died from suicide, as opposed to saying people have committed suicide, denigrates the agency of those people. Please consider acknowledging that these acts, as uncomfortable as they may make you, were choices.
To "commit" suicide implies it is a crime-- true in some cases but not in others. A neutral term would be to create a verb "to suicide".