Penn. Judges Get Kickbacks for Placing Youths in Privately Owned Jails An unprecedented case of judicial corruption is unfolding in Pennsylvania. Several hundred families have filed a class-action lawsuit against two former judges who have pleaded guilty to taking bribes in return for placing youths in privately owned jails. Judges Mark Ciavarella and Michael Conahan are said to have received $2.6 million for ensuring juvenile suspects were jailed in prisons operated by the companies PA Child Care and a sister company, Western PA Child Care. Some of the youths were jailed over the objections of their probation officers. An estimated 5,000 juveniles have been sentenced by Ciavarella since the scheme started in 2002. We speak to two youths sentenced by Ciavarella and to Bob Schwartz of the Juvenile Law Center. Judges jailing kids for cash Prison Industrial Complex Attacks Prop. 5 'Relax Your Muscles as Much as Possible' Faith-Based Rehabilitation U.S. Lawmakers consider 'Piss Tasting Grity Act of 2005' The US Gulag Prison System At the same time, the United States blasts China for the the use of prison slave labor, engaging in the same practice itself. Prison labor is a pot of gold. No strikes, union organizing, health benefits, unemployment insurance or workers' compensation to pay. Journey for Justice Pedaling for Pot
Luzerne County Court Corruption...Probations Revoked Thurs., Feb. 5, 2009 WILKES-BARRE, LUZERNE COUNTY- Dozens of inmates who had been released by a judge accused of fraud are heading back to prison. It turns out that "secret program" was known only to former President Judge Mark Ciavarella. Inmates were placed on parole or probation without the knowledge of the judges who sent them to prison in the first place. Judge Peter Paul Olszewski is angry and concerned. He says a secret probation parole program run by former judge Mark Ciavarella called "crossing over" put dangerous people on the street. Thursday he issued several court orders demanding those inmates be brought back to prison. "I have serious concerns about violent felons being released from prison prior to their sentences being served. Another of the inmates released without my knowledge had previously 5 revocations from probation and parole. That's not the kind of inmate that should be released to our streets early without approval of sentencing judges." 27 inmates were released to the halfway house. 4 of them were sentenced by judge Olszewski. Olszewski says judge Ciavarella not only placed innocent people in harm's way, but he may have broken the law. "I'm also concerned about inmates being released from prison who committed violent crimes and the victims of those crimes have not been notified. They were released from a secure facility into an unsecured facility. That is a serious concern that may have violated state law. That's being looked into." Judges Mark Ciavarella and Michael Conahan are facing 7 years in prison for accepting millions of dollars in kickbacks in connection with a private juvenile facility. Those two judges and court administrator William Sharkey have been charged in this federal corruption investigation. More arrests are coming.
Alberta drug rehab centre abused us, former teen patients allege CBC News Friday, February 13, 2009 Executive director calls them 'liars,' former patient denies abuses The Alberta Adolescent Recovery Centre, based in Calgary, claims an 80 per cent success rate. (CBC) A Calgary facility that is supposed to help teens overcome addictions is the subject of some abuse allegations, a CBC investigation has found. More than a dozen former patients and staff of the Alberta Adolescent Recovery Centre allege the residential program manipulated people into treatment, held them against their will and administered abusive therapy. Other allegations against the centre include one patient who was treated but claimed she was not an addict at all. One patient alleged she was sexually assaulted by a fellow patient, while another said she was attacked in a closet at the centre. Patients alleged that when they reported abuse to the centre, they were either told they were liars or it was their own fault. The CBC’s The Fifth Estate uncovered the allegations during an extensive investigation. The centre, which opened in February 1992 with $500,000 in public funding, has operated for nearly 17 years. It receives $400,000 a year in provincial funding. Head of facility denies allegations Former patients of the centre — some of whom went on to work there as counsellors despite having no formal training — are among its harshest critics. Former patient Rachel O'Neill alleged she was sexually assaulted by two people in a supply closet at the centre. “I think that what [the centre] is, is a predator to those who need help,” said Scott Fowkes. Added Christine Lunn, "I would say that they terrorized us. I would use the word brutalize.” Another former patient, Bodana Kibble, alleged that Dean Vause, the centre’s executive director, is “a power-hungry monster.” After six months of Vause declining to be interviewed for the story, The Fifth Estate’s Gillian Findlay went to the centre with a hidden camera to confront him. He denied the allegations, calling the former patients “liars,” and insisted no abuse has ever been reported to him. Centre claims high success rate “But I would just say to you Gillian, be careful because I’m telling you I’ve worked in this field for 25 years. They’re the best cons in the world …,” said Vause. “But I think that’s part of the pathology, the difficulty of working in addictions. It’s tough because you’re going to have people turn on you because you confront them.” Despite its critics, the centre has committed supporters, who helped raise half a million dollars at a fundraising event in 2008. It costs $50,000 a year to treat a patient at the centre. Patients who cannot afford treatment are subsidized. One former patient who spoke to The Fifth Estate credits the centre for saving his life. After eight months at the centre, Jordan Remple said he no longer uses drugs or alcohol and returned to work there as a peer counsellor. A former client and then peer counsellor, Jordan Remple, said he has never seen abuse at the centre and criticism of the program bothers him. He said he has never seen abuse at the centre and criticism of the program bothers him. “I guess like no one’s going to look at anything perfectly, right? Like there’s always going to be someone that’s judging it poorly,” he said. “But from what I’ve seen, like what it’s done for my life, what it’s done for my friends’ life, what it’s done for my family’s life, like I have no complaints about it whatsoever.” The Calgary centre claims an 80 per cent success rate, though most such programs typically report a 30 to 40 per cent rate. Vause worked as a clinical trainee for six months in 1989 at another controversial teen rehabilitation program called Kids of Bergen County, based in Bergen County, N.J. Vause later claimed he disagreed with the abuse he saw at Kids and left because of it. The New Jersey program was run by Miller Newton, a counsellor with a doctorate in anthropology from an alternative college, the same institution where Vause got his PhD. Alberta sent at least 40 patients to the New Jersey centre in the late 1980s due to the lack of treatment facilities north of the border. 1/2
U.S. facility hit with lawsuit Plagued by reports of alleged beatings and weird rituals, New Jersey authorities raided Newton’s centre in 1989, finally shutting it down in 1998. New Jersey lawyer Phil Elberg successfully sued the centre for $18.6 million Cdn in 1998 claiming malpractice on behalf of former patients. “My argument was simply these kids didn’t have the conditions he diagnosed,” said Elberg. Newton had wanted to expand his program to Alberta, but the province vetoed that plan after his centre was shut down. That’s when Vause set up his own centre. He made it clear to the government it would not use the same abusive tactics. That did not reassure Edmonton-area MLA Marie Laing, who raised the issue in the Alberta legislature in 1990 when she was the NDP human rights and women’s issues critic, as well as a psychologist familiar with Newton’s rehabilitation philosophy. “Well my concern was that they would just beat up the child … I could probably say that better, but they would … they would see the child as fully responsible as a bad child that needed to be changed into a good child,” Laing told The Fifth Estate recently. "We had no proof, right? And the only thing the government would say was, 'We’ll monitor the program.' But there was … there was no mechanism as to how it would be monitored.” Laing’s concerns were justified, according to former patients who spoke with The Fifth Estate. Therapy involves steps program Like Alcoholics Anonymous, the centre’s program is divided into steps. As patients get further along, they earn progressively more access to the outside world. In the beginning, though, “newcomers” are supervised by “oldcomers” — patients further along in the program — who take them home at night. Lunn alleged she was thrown down the stairs in an oldcomer’s home and also sexually abused. When Lunn reported the abuse to the centre, she was labelled a liar, she alleged. Former patient Rachel O’Neill alleged she was sexually assaulted by two people in a supply closet at the centre, though because it was dark, she doesn’t know who her attackers were. In another incident, O’Neill alleged an oldcomer wiped her rectum and then put her fingers in O’Neill’s mouth. O’Neill alleged she fled the centre in late December 2002 in her bare feet. NDP calling for youth centre investigation By Gwendolyn Richards The Calgary Herald 2.18.9 Corrections and Clarifications The program receives $400,000 a year in provincial funding. It was originally reported that it had received $4 million in provincial funding since 2002. Related: The Fifth Estate: Powerless Watch Full Episode cbc.ca/fifth/2008-2009/powerless/video Drug War Distortions Drugwar Lies Linked to Schizophrenia Cover-Ups, Prevarications, Subversions & Sabotage Demonizing Drugs Anti-Drug Campaigns Dumb Down Vital Message Drug Free America Foundation, formerly known as Straight, Inc. From 1976-1985 it was known as Straight, Inc. and had a reputation for abusing kids as a drug rehabilitation program. In 1985 it changed its name to Straight Foundation, Inc. in order to protect its money and its principals from civil suits. In 1995 it was changed again to Drug Free America Foundation. DFAF is a national and international drug policy think tank and provider of services for drug free work places. Calvina Fay is the Executive Director of Drug Free America Foundation and Save Our Society From Drugs (S.O.S.). WomansWackyVengeanceUnion 'Relax Your Muscles as Much as Possible' "The horrors experienced by many young inmates, particularly those who are convicted of nonviolent offenses, border on the unimaginable. Prison rape not only threatens the lives of those who fall prey to their aggressors, but it is potentially devastating to the human spirit. Shame, depression, and a shattering loss of self-esteem accompany the perpetual terror the victim thereafter must endure." - U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun, Farmer v. Brennan Lies Our Drug Warriors Told Us Fascists Piss Tasters Christian Extremism and Terrorism In History Big Bucks in forced Faith-Based Rehabilitation Over the door of one church-based drug treatment center in Houston, a sign printed in foot-high letters announces: "Drug Addiction Is NOT a Disease. It's a Sin." At a Christian young adult home in Corpus Christi, police arrested a supervisor after teenagers complained that they were beaten and roped to a bed, all in the name of Christian discipline.
I live in this county. The feds & secret service are doing a shakedown in the courthouse. It's about time. There's too much corruption in the county for too many years. They busted the county commissioners and other county emplyees last summer for county credit card abuse. These commissioners and employees were using these cards for personnal use. Including trips to vegas and they even used the cards at strip clubs. That's what started the investegation. It kills me when they say this county is in major debt. To much shady shit.