Biden's commutation in 'kids for cash' scandal angers some Pennsylvania
families
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[December 14, 2024]
By MICHAEL RUBINKAM
A judge who helped orchestrate one of the worst judicial scandals in
U.S.history — a scheme to send children to for-profit jails in exchange
for kickbacks — was among the 1,500 people whose sentences were commuted
by President Joe Biden this week.
Biden's decision to commute the 17-year prison sentence of Michael
Conahan angered many in northeastern Pennsylvania, from the governor to
the families whose children were victimized by the disgraced former
judge. Conahan had already served the vast majority of his sentence,
which was handed down in 2011.
“I do feel strongly that President Biden got it absolutely wrong and
created a lot of pain here in northeastern Pennsylvania,” Gov. Josh
Shapiro, a Democrat, said during an unrelated news conference in
Scranton on Friday.
The scandal “affected families in really deep and profound and sad
ways,” he added. Conahan “deserves to be behind bars, not walking as a
free man.”
A message seeking comment was sent to an attorney who recently
represented Conahan, the former president judge of the Luzerne County
Court of Common Pleas.
In what came to be known as the kids-for-cash scandal, Conahan and Judge
Mark Ciavarella shut down a county-run juvenile detention center and
accepted $2.8 million in illegal payments from a friend of Conahan's who
built and co-owned two for-profit lockups.

Ciavarella, who presided over juvenile court, pushed a zero-tolerance
policy that guaranteed large numbers of children would fill the beds of
the private lockups. The scandal prompted the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
to throw out some 4,000 juvenile convictions involving more than 2,300
children.
Sandy Fonzo, whose son killed himself at age 23 after Ciavarella locked
him up as a teen, called Conahan's commutation an “injustice.”
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In this Feb. 12, 2009, file photo, Michael Conahan, center, a former
Pennsylvania judge involved in a scheme to send youths to a
for-profit jail in exchange for kickbacks, leaves the federal
courthouse in Scranton, Pa. (AP Photo/David Kidwell, File)

“I am shocked and I am hurt,” Fonzo said in a statement provided to
The Citizens' Voice of Wilkes-Barre. “Conahan‘s actions destroyed
families, including mine, and my son‘s death is a tragic reminder of
the consequences of his abuse of power. This pardon feels like an
injustice for all of us who still suffer. Right now I am processing
and doing the best I can to cope with the pain that this has brought
back.”
The Juvenile Law Center, which represented plaintiffs in a $200
million civil judgment against Conahan and Ciavarella, said in a
statement that it “supported President Biden's actions" but wants to
see the “same kind of compassion and mercy” extended to juvenile
defendants around the country.
Conahan was a powerful figure in northeastern Pennsylvania before
his arrest, regularly meeting for breakfast with the reputed boss of
an area Mafia family.
When he pleaded guilty in 2010, Conahan apologized to the youths he
had hurt.
“The system is not corrupt,” Conahan said at the time. “I was
corrupt.”
In 2020, Conahan was released to home confinement with six years
left on his sentence as part of an effort to slow the spread of
COVID-19 in federal prisons.
Ciavarella, who went to trial and was convicted of some of the
charges, is serving a 28-year sentence.
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