Kids for Cash
The blurring of the line that separates profit from state, especially since the Reagan era, has had a far more devastating effect on American values - indeed, on the very notion that anything besides a good financial buzz even has value - than the blurring of that more famously wobbly line that separates church from state. What's been going on in the Luzerne County judicial system over the last five or six years illustrates this with a raw jolt.
Two juvenile court judges there, Mark Ciavarella and Michael Conahan, were recently arrested for setting a new standard in entrepreneurial corruption: taking payoffs - $2.6 million since 2003 - in return for sending youngsters accused of petty offenses (fighting, shoplifting, lampooning an assistant principal on MySpace) to private prison facilities, sometimes for preposterously extended stays.
The war on crime (the long-running domestic version of the war on terror) meets the predatory logic of the free market. Whack! Thwack! You get it yet, America? Nothing is sacred except the Almighty Buck. All hail the free market and I-get-mine.
The bad idea here is privatizing prisons. A former co-owner of the two facilities where the kids got sent, PA Child Care LLC and a sister company, Western PA Child Care LLC, insists on his own victimization in the judicial fraud - he had no choice but to cough up the bribe money, his lawyer says - and he has not been charged, though investigation continues. But the lucrative contracts these facilities secured with the county were, according to the Associated Press, "at least (partially) dependent on how many juveniles were locked up."
Wow, is that cynical or what? Such contracts are crimes of opportunity waiting to happen, especially in an atmosphere of government-is-the-problem that the political right has been promoting with lavishly funded PR campaigns since the '80s. As government is stripped of moral legitimacy, it degrades into a cash cow. And when that happens, this fragile agreement called democracy, which we have been slowly constructing over the last 232 years, begins falling apart.
In the juvenile court system that Ciavarella and Conahan presided over, according to news accounts, justice had a Guantanamo Bay feel to it. Young people accused of one thing or another were herded before the magistrate, often having unknowingly ("Here, sign this") waived their right to counsel, given a hearing that may have lasted no more than 90 seconds and, as the gavel fell, sent off to the junior slammer. "Next!"
Many of these kids had never been in trouble before and many of the offenses that netted jail time were trivial in the extreme. Sixteen-year-old Hillary Transue, for instance, who lampooned her assistant principal on MySpace, was given a three-month sentence. (With a lawyer's help, she got out after one.) Kurt Kruger was in the company of someone who was caught shoplifting at Wal-Mart; accused of being a "lookout," he wound up doing almost a year of jail time. Jamie Quinn exchanged slaps with a friend during an argument; she also was sent away for almost a year. She was 14.
Multiply these judicial disasters by, oh, 5,000. That's the number of cases the Pennsylvania Supreme court will have to reopen, according to Bob Schwartz, executive director of the Philadelphia-based Juvenile Law Center, which advocated for some of the convicted teens and helped expose the fraud. Several hundred families have filed a class-action lawsuit against the two ex-judges, the AP reported.
There is, of course, an obvious and shocking immorality on display in this scandal. Beyond the corruption and illegality, however, some fundamental questions loom that have immeasurable bearing on who we are as a nation.
When justice is partially privatized, the profit motive enters the debate about effective crime control and the long-term value of punishment. Crime profiteers are as socially detrimental as war profiteers: Their primary interest, as exemplified so audaciously in Wilkes-Barre, isn't fairness, justice, rehabilitation or the good of the community, but, sheerly, the processing of detainees. The more the merrier. Recidivism is a good thing.
And their influence shows in public policy. For instance, controversial "three strikes" laws that call for mandatory sentencing have the fingerprints of lobbyists for the private corrections industry all over them. Our prison population has been skyrocketing because of such laws since the '80s; more than 2 million Americans are now behind bars, making our prison population by far the largest in the world. There's a lot of money in crime.
But while the crime profiteers get rich, state and local governments go bankrupt pouring money into the dead end of punishment. The Washington Post has pointed out that, in the last two decades, state spending on corrections increased by 127 percent, while spending on higher education rose only 21 percent. This is what happens when we sell our values - and our children - to the highest bidder.

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12 Comments so far
Show AllImprisonment is a growth industry fed by greedy, fearmongering conservatives.
And just think the good people of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania elected these "men"...
Man, that $2.6 mill ain't shit compared to what we undercover narcs get when we bust up a dealer or two; and that's just under the table shit. What we get in forfeited assets would blow most people out of their chairs! How do you all think I pay for my new speed boat and trailer, er, I mean, our neat equipment? By making the PROPERTY prove itself INNOCENT! Yeah, no shit dude! The lawyers got it all figgered out. (Well, okay you got me, the assets and a whole LOTTA tax dollars from the great American citizenry.)
We the people just love a privatized war - by that I mean that all the transactions remain private. Kinda like Iraq and Afghanistan only this one's being waged on U.S citizens and will last a whole HELLUVA lot longer. And that my friends is why you will never, EVER, see legalized drugs in this country. You can't pay for dirty wars if you don't have the cash - shit man, a mercenary's gotta eat!
Another rot in the American judicial system is the practice of plea bargains. In connection with the draconian sentencing guidelines, the injunction against double jeapordy leads to tragic results.
I have a personal connection to a couple who took their 2 year old to the hospital with a broken arm. They were then accused of child abuse and given a plea bargain of 2 years in the shade. They pleaded innocent, were convicted and sentenced to 28 and 32 years. The children, including the baby the wife birthed in prison, were sent away to foster homes.
What happened, did they break the baby boy's arm? I don't know -- but the 2 years for 32, if you plead guilty strikes me as obscene.
_______
There's a glory in the morning because the earth turns 'round and a promise in the evening when the sun goes down
can't speak to your example of course, but i think most people in prison are there on plea-bargains. inherently coercive and seems to violate the right not to accuse one's self. legal expenses alone compel many to seek plea-bargains.
It has absolutely nothing to do with legal expenses; if one has a public defender, they have a public defender. It's the system. It is designed by lawyers for lawyers. Many public defenders work arm-in-arm with the state's atty. One such public defender in Bureau County Illinois actually puts his clients on the intercom which is connected to the State's Atty's office.
And don't get me started on snitches...wow. It truly is a crazy legal world we live in.
This is just the tip of a very big iceberg. The Court system is totally under the control of money. With enough money anyone can hire an 'expert witness' to testify to anything. Google my name and "The Deposition".
Putting authoritarians in power is NEVER a good idea. We see the results every day in this country. WE go to jail (as do our kids, apparently) for the most minor of infractions, while those in charge never even get brought up on charges for things that would get US the chair. Rove is a perfect example. He has ignored 4 congressional subpoenas. Which one of US could do that and still be walking around a free man?
7 years is nowhere near enough time for these judges. They have destroyed children's lives, they have corrupted our very way of life for nothing more than a few dollars. They should get life. I hope that these families with their class action suit take them for everything they own.
We have to end the for profit justice system. Justice for money is NO justice at all. There are some things that the gov't SHOULD be in charge of, and prisons and jails is one of them, purely because that way there is an incentive to keep people OUT of the system. What we have now is entirely unsustainable, it's only real purpose being to jail as many as possible.
Frontline did an episode on what happens to a community when they put in a prison. It's worse for that community than WalMart is. With nothing but the profit motive behind it, before long it's starving out the local businesses and there is nowhere else to work BUT the prison. This has to end, and end soon. We simply cannot afford to keep paying the rich to lock up our citizens for every infraction. We can't afford "three strikes" laws (justice is not the same as baseball), and we just can't afford to keep this up. It's bankrupting us, and it's destroying our society.
And you can bet that these 2 judges are just the tip of a very large iceberg.They were just sloppy enough to get caught. May they rot in hell.
Sioux Rose
WJM: Interesting your comment about the community ends up serving the prison(s). Are we not seeing a transition to an economy where just about everyone will work for some uniformed enterprise, all of them answering to force or punishment or a form of violence that's anathema to the premise of liberty?
As the economy worsens while those who engineered the schemes that allowed them to make off like 21st century VERY SUCESSFUL bandits get away scot-free, it would seem more and more desperate persons will sign up for military or some "guard" position.
Who remembers the name of the film where four boys get into mischief in the form of pushing a local hot dog guy's cart down some subway steps and the very punitive judge sentences them to a lot of time in a juvenile facility run by pediophiles, one played powerfully by Kevin Bacon? The movie blatantly reveals the sex abuse these young boys are susceptible to in such environs. When we speak of lives ruined, how these children were railroaded into ridiculously long/punitive sentences, there may also be a sexual abuse component that will take YEARS to heal.
I can't imagine a time when there was more corruption in this nation. Each day the news of what's uncovered is sickening to the Nth degree. And so much of it is executed by those in positions of authority or trust or ACCESS to public funds. Unbelievable.
as bad as this privatization thing is, the whole system is really that way, private or public: judges appointed/elected to be "tough on crime", police/prosecutor careers made thru numbers of tickets, arrests, convictions, etc., politicians & media terrifying people w/crime stories. coerced confessions are rampant. who was it who said you can tell the level of civilization in a society by the way it treats its prisoners (dostoevsky? he would know after time in siberia)?
the author rightly connects the "war on crime", the "war on drugs", and the "war on terror." abu ghraib is really not surprising after all.
THANK YOU for exposing this terrible situation!!
Somehow, before reading this, I'd imagined the men who send children to prison for long terms as just cruel-hearted, child-hating, "crime & punishment" types. Don't know why I didn't connect the dots to include graft.
This explains a lot.
The few examples given here are simply outrageous!
Deregulated, privatized economies allow EVERYONE, even judges in the courtroom, to be an enterpreneuer !
Follow the money to find the facts !!!!