Friday, July 31, 2009

Novel Judicial Strategy: Meet With Mobsters Twice a Month

Court Filing Says Former Judge Met With Felons Twice a Month 
The Legal Intelligencer by Leo Strupczewski and Hank Grezlak - March 2, 2009

A former Luzerne County, Pa., president judge used to hold meetings about twice a month with a reputed mob boss and a common friend -- also an admitted felon -- to discuss pending court cases, according to a supplement to a King's Bench petition filed with the Pennsylvania Supreme Court Friday. The owners of Wilkes-Barre, Pa.-based newspaper the Citizens' Voice wrote to the court that a friend of William "Billy" D'Elia, Robert Kulick, has detailed his relationship with former Luzerne County Judge Michael T. Conahan and D'Elia. According to the supplement, the three men once met in Conahan's chambers when they were located in the main courthouse to discuss a case in which D'Elia and Kulick "were both interested." That meeting happened prior to a hearing in that case, Kulick alleged. Kulick went on to say that the meetings usually occurred at a restaurant, which was not named, and began with a "general conversation," the supplement claims. They generally happened around breakfast. When talk would steer toward pending cases, D'Elia would leave the table so Kulick and Conahan could talk in private, the supplement claims. Kulick would leave the table when D'Elia and Conahan would talk in private. "If I or someone I knew had an interest in a particular case pending before that court, I would ask Judge Conahan to consider that the party I supported got a 'fair shake,' or a 'second look,'" Kulick claims in a declaration attached to the supplement. "It was my understanding that if the case was not being handled by Judge Conahan himself, he would, on occasion, speak to other judges who were handling the matter in response to my request. At various times, Judge Conahan would confirm that he had either acted on my requests or had arranged for them to be acted on." According to the supplement, Kulick was interviewed by the newspaper's attorneys Tuesday. Through his attorney, D'Elia issued a statement denying Kulick's declaration.

"I in no way was involved with the judges and juvenile detention center and the Thomas Joseph law suit," D'Elia said, according to attorney James Swetz. Asked what his client's statement meant, Swetz said that would require interpretation. He said he was not prepared to do that. "It's his statement and he wanted me to answer any inquiry by releasing that sentence," Swetz said. "To put it mildly, he disagrees with Kulick's declaration." Kulick's attorney, Michael A. Schwartz of Pepper Hamilton, was reluctant to comment on the matter other than to issue a single sentence -- similar to others he has issued in relation to the Luzerne corruption probe. For instance, when asked if his client had approval from the U.S. Attorney's Office to cooperate with the newspaper's lawyers, Schwartz said: "Bob Kulick has fully accepted responsibility for the crime for which he has been charged and he continues to answer questions and cooperate with all law enforcement authorities." Asked whether he or his client approached the newspaper or whether or how the newspaper approached him or his client, Schwartz said he could not comment. Conahan's attorney, Philip Gelso, could not be reached for comment.

The filing, first reported by the Citizens' Voice, confirms what The Legal Intelligencer first reported online Feb. 20 and in print last Monday -- that Kulick was the company's witness. It also supports a claim made by another source to The Legal Intelligencer weeks ago: that another person had told the source he had seen Conahan, Kulick and D'Elia meet at the courthouse to discuss business. The source portrayed the relator of that information as someone other than Kulick. The source who related the story had no knowledge of what the alleged meeting covered. A former Luzerne County judge has also told The Legal Intelligencer that Conahan and Kulick were "friendly" and could be seen chatting in area restaurants and bars. The judge described Kulick's relationship with D'Elia in the same manner.

Other sources said Kulick and D'Elia were cooperating with federal authorities in their ongoing corruption probe at the county courthouse. Both men have pleaded guilty in the last year to criminal charges -- Kulick to possession of a firearm by an admitted felon, D'Elia to money-laundering conspiracy and witness tampering charges in March 2008. President Judge Chester B. Muroski confirmed to The Legal Intelligencer last week that he had been interviewed by the FBI about court administration issues. He allowed the investigators to photocopy documents concerning civil court matters without a subpoena, he said. Sources said other judges were interviewed, but none returned repeated calls for comment. Multiple sources have also relayed rumors to The Legal Intelligencer that other judges are being looked at by federal authorities. Those sources have not said whether the rumors include what the possible focus of the inquiry might be or the number of judges. The newspaper's supplement is the second filing to the state Supreme Court in which it asks the justices to vacate a $3.5 million defamation award issued against the newspaper and reopen discovery in the case.

In Joseph v. Scranton Times, Thomas Joseph, a Luzerne County businessman, argued that articles published by the Citizens' Voice during its coverage of a 2001 federal investigation that targeted D'Elia and his alleged business partners damaged his reputation and business. A source told the paper that federal officials were investigating Joseph to see whether he used his direct mail and advertising business to launder money for D'Elia and that his taxi and limousine service was used to traffic guns, drugs and prostitutes between the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton and Lehigh Valley international airports and Atlantic City, N.J., New York City and Philadelphia. Joseph was never charged with any wrongdoing. Conahan handled the pretrial matters and, despite voiced concerns from the newspaper company, worked with William T. Sharkey, the former court administrator who has pleaded guilty to embezzling funds, to steer the case to former President Judge Mark A. Ciavarella Jr. for a 10-day nonjury trial, according to the petition. In the petition, the newspaper claims that Ciavarella disregarded "substantial evidence connecting Joseph and D'Elia, including search warrants, the affidavits of probable cause and the Pen Register results showing hundreds of calls between them." Instead, the petition continues, the judge accepted Joseph's testimony that he and D'Elia were "mere acquaintances."  He also discounted the newspaper's reporting because Joseph was never mentioned in a May 2006 indictment of D'Elia and found one of the newspaper's witnesses, Joseph's former wife, to be not credible because she had prior convictions and was granted immunity by a grand jury for her testimony.

Ciavarella awarded Joseph and his businesses $3.5 million in damages. Joseph's attorneys, George W. Croner and Christina Donato Saler of Kohn Swift & Graf in Philadelphia, filed a strongly worded response to the newspaper's petition on Wednesday, calling the request a "free-for-all fishing expedition." "Turning to a historical metaphor, it is vitally important that the search to root out genuine wrongdoing does not lead courts or litigants to the practices of the Salem Witch Trials, where rumor, gossip and innuendo were substituted for rationality, reflection and deliberation," the attorneys wrote in the reply. Joseph's attorneys also noted the verdict was the subject of a trial at which the defendant newspaper and journalists presented "virtually no evidence supporting the reporting and publication process used with their journalism." The supplement also includes a declaration by attorney J. Timothy Hinton, who searched about 4,600 of the county's disposed cases. Only Joseph v. Scranton Times had a note indicating Conahan and Sharkey were involved in assigning the case, according to the supplement.

"Kulick's Declaration and the Database Records are additional evidence that the corruption in the Luzerne County Court of Common Pleas infected Joseph v. Scranton Times and likely predetermined its outcome in favor of Thomas A Joseph," the supplement claims. "This additional evidence along with the evidence previously submitted by Petitioners provide ample basis for this Court to vacate the $3.5 million in Joseph's favor or, at a minimum, authorize a period of discovery to be followed by a hearing, if necessary, and briefing on Petitioner's motion to vacate." Conahan and Ciavarella have pleaded guilty to charges they accepted $2.6 million in kickbacks from the owner and builder of a juvenile detention center. The government alleges the judges steered juveniles to the facility. In his declaration, Kulick claimed he met the judges after opening a restaurant -- Olives Mediterranean Restaurant -- in 1999. He had a "social" relationship with Ciavarella, saw him at various events and invited him to his home "from time to time." Kulick claimed he would see Conahan at the same events, but the contact between the two "was considerably more extensive." Kulick arranged the breakfast meetings with Conahan about twice a month until 2007. They stopped after Kulick's wife, Michelle Mattioli-Kulick, received a grand jury subpoena regarding a letter of recommendation Conahan had written for her, Kulick claimed. Mattioli-Kulick was apparently attempting to obtain an offshore, online casino license at the time.

9 comments:

  1. "fair" means "fix"August 1, 2009 at 8:05 PM

    My favorite part is that the corrupt scum bags just want to make sure the right parties were treated "fair." Of course, "fair" means "fixed."

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  2. New York judges have this lightweight beat, dirty hands down. New York judges meet with mobsters more regularly. It's true, things are bigger and better in NY. Bigger corruption, better abuse of system.

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  3. No one can point to one law that specifically says you cannot meet with mobsters a few times a month!!!!

    How else are you supposed to get the envelopes filled with cash?!?

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  4. These thugs should come to NY and learn how to play the game. One thing they have learned I see is non-jury trials. A favored method of judicial control that I believe is illegal but who cares the thugs run the courts. It's their court and they control the game and don't ever forget it.

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  5. The federal government (FBI) needs to keep their eye in and around the court system walls and halls.... in NY state as well as the mob that is constantly in their company......all throughout the state, as well as NYC......as upstate has it's share of leftover mobsters that did not move completely to Florida.

    The feds made strides in the 80's and 90's to send some big but "old" mafia away to prison and they protected those "old" ones that snitched......thinking they sent a real message to them, that they would be forever hunted and the young ones could not re-organize...not!

    Any child knows the mob has been a dangerous force in the American government and population, since they arrived...decades AND decades ago!

    A lesson from the Chicago court corruption dismantling...the need for the feds to be in and around courthouses in mafia controlled cities, esp existing from years back...is a life long mandatory government obligation to American citizens...whether they call it the very suspect government corruption unit...or the court mafia syndicate dissolution dept...the work must be done and announced to the public immediately!

    The work the feds did in the 80's and 90's to prohibit the continuation of the organized crimes of the Mafia..... in all of NY state was in vain...at least for the citizens of NY and America!

    I think the NY STATE courthouses saw it as a profitable lesson for them to quietly enter the organized crime business..openly... as the court system.....because who would ever suspect the respected judiciary of this behavior... or ever be able to disrupt and charge the appliers of the law (judges) that were in this dastardly business... who were expected by the people... to uphold the law as described in their solemn oath of this powerful professional office.

    Instead, as the proof mounts..it is evident that the NY state judiciary and political parties controlling courthouses and judicial offices...have embraced the opposite of what we have elected and expected them to perform morally and professionally... and are now participating in all crimes... of all dimensions... blatantly and consciously , as they can accept no other title today than...... the black robe mafia of NY state!

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  6. To the writer about the non-jury trial fixing situation...that is very astute of you to understand that complexity of legal manuvering.
    Non-jury trials are sometimes setups..often times by attys and judges who are cognizant of the defts guilt,(home conversations about court cases, by judges and attys are not rare and include privately discussed benefits for both parties)and want to favor a special deft with a dismissal, while avoiding
    the very generous offer of a plea that is legally...the best deal that deft would have ever seen...besides the fixed trial.
    I have seen many trials fixed by judges for atty friends and others they knew for years...and transcript fixing is the perfect tool to complete the activity...and court reporters want you to feel their pain of having to do this to keep their job...as they have never heard of the FBI...SINCE THEY CARRY THE PROOF RIGHT IN THEIR HANDS AND TAPE REOCORDERS THEY CAN EASILY CARRY INTO COURT!

    Non-jury trials...the means to the pay!

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  7. Try appealing a fixed Jury trial verdict... You have even less of a chance..

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  8. I wonder if the judge always uses the terms
    "thank you for your conscience" or "you can accept/deny any evidence to make your decision"
    in a fixed jury trial

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  9. they have never heard of the FBI...SINCE THEY CARRY THE PROOF RIGHT IN THEIR HANDS AND TAPE REOCORDERS THEY CAN EASILY CARRY INTO COURT!


    that would be the key to unlock the corruption........
    Under Cover Court Reporters!
    Under Cover Deposition Reporters!

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