Federal Officials Announce the Filing of Federal Fraud and Tax Charges Against Two Luzerne County Common Pleas Court Judges in an On-Going Public Corruption Probe
Martin C. Carlson, United States Attorney for the Middle
District of Pennsylvania, Janice Fedaryck, Special Agent in Charge,
Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Leslie DeMarco, Special Agent
in Charge, Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation
Division, jointly announced today that two Luzerne County Common
Pleas Court Judges have been charged with engaging in a scheme to
defraud the public of their honest services, and with conspiring to
defraud the Internal Revenue Service, in connection with a multimillion
honest services fraud scheme involving the placement of
juveniles in juvenile detention facilities.
According to federal officials, President Judge Mark A.
Ciavarella, age 58, and former President Judge Michael T. Conahan,
age 56, both of the Luzerne County Court of Common Pleas, have
been charged in a two count criminal information with conspiring to
impede the IRS in the collection of federal income taxes and with
having devised a scheme to defraud the citizens of Luzerne County
and of Pennsylvania of the right to their honest services by
concealing their receipt of more than $2.5 million between 2001 and
2008.
Federal officials noted that, in conjunction with the filing
of the charges, the United States has also filed plea agreements
signed by both of these defendants. In these plea agreements Judge
Ciavarella and Judge Conahan have indicated their intention to
plead guilty to these honest service fraud and income tax
conspiracy charges and stipulated to serve 87 months in federal
prison. The Judges further agree to resign their positions as
judges and consent to automatic disbarment from the practice of
law, as well as pay restitution and undergo forfeitures as
determined by a federal court.
According to the charges filed today in federal court, the
defendants engaged in wide-ranging fraud by taking millions of
dollars from two unnamed persons in connection with the operation
of juvenile detention centers in Luzerne County. These payments,
characterized as “finder’s fees,” were paid to the judges in return
for their assistance in arranging for the construction of the
juvenile facilities. Additionally, it is alleged that the
defendants received payments totaling hundreds of thousands of
dollars as a condition for sending juveniles to those facilities.
The criminal information charges that, between 2004 and 2007,
both judges filed materially false annual statements of financial
interests with the Administrative Office of the Pennsylvania Courts
in which they failed to disclose the income they received from
these unnamed persons, and in which they failed to disclose their
financial relationship with these businesses. At the same time the
Judges were concealing these payments and financial ties, it is
alleged that the Judges took a series of actions to benefit these
businesses in which they had undisclosed financial interests .
These actions are alleged to have included:
- Causing the return of Luzerne County’s license to operate a
juvenile detention facility to the state, effectively closing a
county-run youth detention center;
- Ordering juveniles to be sent to these facilities in which
the judges had a financial interest even when Juvenile Probation
Officers did not recommend detention; and
- Sending a letter guaranteeing that Luzerne County would pay
approximately $1.3 million annually to house juveniles at these
facilities, without disclosing these payments received by the
judges.
The charges filed today in federal court allege that the
defendants deprived the citizens of Luzerne County of their right
to the honest services of these judges by taking these actions
without disqualifying themselves from these matters in which they
had a conflict of interest, and without disclosing to parties
involved in court proceedings, and to the Administrative Office of
the Pennsylvania Courts, their conflict of interest and their
financial relationship with these businesses, as they were required
to do by law, by the Pennsylvania Constitution and by the Canons of
Ethics that govern judges’ performance of their duties.
According to the charges filed today, the defendants received
the payments into businesses that they owned or controlled, and in
some instances falsely identified the payments as rental fees for
a Florida condominium. The information further charges that the
defendants conspired to impede the IRS by not declaring the income
in their tax returns for the years the money was being paid.
Leslie P. DeMarco, Special Agent in Charge of the Internal
Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation stated, “Our mission, as
it relates to public corruption, is to identify and prosecute
public officials who engage in illegal activities that ultimately
lead to violations of tax law or money laundering statutes.
Because public corruption is a crime that is generally motivated
by greed and revolves around money, a thorough financial
investigation is often necessary to successfully prosecute the offenders. With both law enforcement and financial investigation
expertise, Special Agents of the Internal Revenue Service-
Criminal Investigation are uniquely qualified to assist in these
types of cases. We are pleased to have had this opportunity to
work closely with the United States Attorney's Office, the
District Attorney's Office and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, whose dedication and perseverance brought this
case to a successful resolution. We will continue to devote our
resources to vigorously investigate and prosecute those
individuals who violate federal law.”
"Public corruption is a betrayal of a sacred trust that
erodes public confidence, undermines the strength of our
democracy, and threatens the integrity of our government," said
Janice K. Fedarcyk, Special Agent in Charge of the Philadelphia
Division of the FBI, "and for those reasons it remains our top
criminal priority. The citizens of Luzerne County, like all
citizens of the United States, have a right to expect honest
services from their public officials."
Mr. Carlson noted that the case was investigated by the
Federal Bureau of Investigation and by criminal investigators of
the Internal Revenue Service. In announcing these charges U.S.
Attorney Carlson commended these investigative agencies for their
outstanding commitment and tenacity. Mr. Carlson also praised the
close working relationship among the investigators and the
attorneys, all of whom worked long hours to achieve a successful
resolution of the case . Mr. Carlson further noted that Luzerne
County District Attorney Jackie Carroll worked closely with
federal investigators and with the United States Attorney’s
Office in assisting with the investigation. Mr. Carlson
commended Senior Litigation Counsel Gordon Zubrod, who led the
prosecution team in this case, and praised the outstanding work
of the entire prosecution team, which included Assistant U.S. Attorneys William Houser, Michael Consiglio, Amy Phillips and
Criminal Division Chief Christian Fisanick.
An Indictment or Information is not evidence of guilt but simply a description of the charge
made by the Grand Jury and/or United States Attorney against a defendant. A charged
Defendant is presumed innocent until a jury returns a unanimous finding that the United States
has proven the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt or until the defendant has pled
guilty to the charges.
Press Releases | Philadelphia
Home