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Kids-for-cash judges ordered to pay more than $200M

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Kids-for-cash judges ordered to pay more than $200M

Two former Pennsylvania judges who orchestrated a scheme to ship youngsters to for-profit jails in trade for kickbacks have been ordered to pay greater than $200 million to a whole bunch of individuals they victimized in one of many worst judicial scandals in U.S. historical past.

U.S. District Decide Christopher Conner awarded $106 million in compensatory damages and $100 million in punitive damages to just about 300 folks in a long-running civil go well with in opposition to the judges, writing the plaintiffs are “the tragic human casualties of a scandal of epic proportions.”

In what got here to be often known as the kids-for-cash scandal, Mark Ciavarella and one other decide, Michael Conahan, shut down a county-run juvenile detention middle and accepted $2.8 million in unlawful funds from the builder and co-owner of two for-profit lockups. Ciavarella, who presided over juvenile court docket, pushed a zero-tolerance coverage that assured giant numbers of children can be despatched to PA Baby Care and its sister facility, Western PA Baby Care.

Ciavarella ordered youngsters as younger as 8 to detention, lots of them first-time offenders deemed delinquent for petty theft, jaywalking, truancy, smoking on faculty grounds and different minor infractions. The decide usually ordered youths he had discovered delinquent to be instantly shackled, handcuffed and brought away with out giving them an opportunity to place up a protection and even say goodbye to their households.

“Ciavarella and Conahan deserted their oath and breached the general public belief,” Conner wrote Tuesday in his clarification of the judgment. “Their merciless and despicable actions victimized a weak inhabitants of younger folks, lots of whom have been affected by emotional points and psychological well being issues.”

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The Pennsylvania Supreme Courtroom threw out some 4,000 juvenile convictions involving greater than 2,300 youngsters after the scheme was uncovered.

It’s unlikely the now-adult victims will see even a fraction of the eye-popping damages award, however a lawyer for the plaintiffs stated it’s a recognition of the enormity of the disgraced judges’ crimes.

“It’s an enormous victory,” Marsha Levick, co-founder and chief counsel of the Philadelphia-based Juvenile Legislation Middle and a lawyer for the plaintiffs, stated Wednesday. “To have an order from a federal court docket that acknowledges the gravity of what the judges did to those youngsters within the midst of a number of the most important years of their childhood and improvement issues enormously, whether or not or not the cash will get paid.”

One other plaintiffs’ lawyer, Sol Weiss, stated he would start a probe of the judges’ property, however didn’t assume that they had any cash to pay a judgment.

Ciavarella, 72, is serving a 28-year jail sentence in Kentucky. His projected launch date is 2035.

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Conahan, 70, was sentenced to greater than 17 years in jail however was launched to residence confinement in 2020 — with six years left on his sentence — due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Conner dominated after listening to often-emotional testimony final yr from 282 individuals who appeared in Luzerne County juvenile court docket between 2003 and 2008 — 79 of whom have been beneath 13 when Ciavarella despatched them to juvenile detention — and 32 mother and father.

“They recounted his harsh and arbitrary nature, his disdain for due course of, his extraordinary abruptness, and his cavalier and boorish conduct within the courtroom,” Conner wrote.

One unnamed youngster sufferer testified that Ciavarella had “ruined my life” and “simply didn’t let me get to my future,” in accordance with Conner’s ruling.

Stated one other plaintiff: “I really feel I used to be simply bought out for no purpose. Like all people simply stood in line to be bought.”

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One other sufferer described how he shook uncontrollably throughout a routine visitors cease — a consequence of the traumatizing impression of his childhood detention — and needed to present his psychological well being data in court docket to “clarify why my conduct was so erratic.”

A number of of the childhood victims who have been a part of the lawsuit when it started in 2009 have since died from overdoses or suicide, Conner stated.

To calculate compensatory damages, the decide determined every plaintiff was entitled to a base fee of $1,000 for every day of wrongful detention, and adjusted that quantity based mostly on the circumstances of every case. Substantial punitive damages have been warranted as a result of the disgraced judges inflicted “unspeakable bodily and emotional trauma” on youngsters and adolescents, Conner wrote.

The damages award solely covers plaintiffs who selected to take part in course of.

Different main figures within the case settled years in the past, together with the builder and the proprietor of the personal lockups and their corporations, in payouts totaling about $25 million.

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Michelle Williams turns Millennium Park into a gospel choir : Wait Wait… Don't Tell Me!

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Michelle Williams turns Millennium Park into a gospel choir : Wait Wait… Don't Tell Me!
On this week’s episode, actor and singer Michelle Williams talks growing up in the church, auditioning for Destiny’s Child, and how to get an NPR audience to sing a hymn. Plus, panelists Alonzo Bodden, Helen Hong, and Paula Poundstone talk flags.
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Judge upholds Austin's weed decriminalization measure over state challenge

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Judge upholds Austin's weed decriminalization measure over state challenge
Austin stoners can breathe a smoky sigh of relief. A Travis County judge this week dismissed a lawsuit from Attorney General Ken Paxton challenging Austin’s voter referendum to decriminalize marijuana in small amounts. The ruling marks a temporary win for local rule and emboldens weed activists looking to pass similar measures in other Texas cities, although Paxton will likely appeal the lower court’s decision. In 2022, Austin voters…
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Sunday Puzzle: Net Worth

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Sunday Puzzle: Net Worth

Sunday Puzzle

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NPR

On-air challenge: Every answer today is a word or name ending in “net,” in any spelling.
 

Ex. Small room in which to eat meals –>  DINETTE

1. Person with brown hair

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2. Old crime show with the catchphrase “Just the facts, ma’am”

3. Puppet manipulated by strings

4. Soldier’s weapon used for stabbing

5. Wind instrument akin to an oboe

6. Brass instrument related to the trumpet

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7. Percussion instrument that a dancer clicks

8. Old French queen Marie ___

9. Singer Tammy

10. ___ Rankin, first woman in Congress

11. ___ Funicello, one of TV’s original Mouseketeers 

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12. Comedian Carol

13. President Joe Biden’s middle name 

14. Newspaper chain that publishes USA Today

15. Villainous superintelligence system in the “Terminator” films

16. Something a baby sleeps in

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Last week’s challenge: Think of a famous writer with a three-word name. The first two letters of the last name followed by the first two letters of the middle name followed by the first two letters of the first name, in order, spell an adjective that describes this author today. Who is it?

Challenge answer: Edgar Rice Burroughs -> BURIED

Winner: Cary Seidman of Cleveland Heights, Ohio

This week’s challenge: This week’s challenge comes from listener Patrick McIntyre, of Seattle, and it’s a little tricky. What item containing a silent U is commonly found in kitchen drawers?

Submit Your Answer

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If you know the answer to the challenge, submit it here by Thursday, June 13th at 3 p.m. ET. Listeners whose answers are selected win a chance to play the on-air puzzle. Important: include a phone number where we can reach you.

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