Wednesday, July 16, 2008

The Judge and the Drug Dealer

My longstanding antipathy to Judge Michael Conahan is well known, from insinuations of illegal and unethical behavior to a cavalier disregard for the law and concept of Justice. I also have an issue with the tidy little deal he gave Cobra Video's owner and gay Pornographer Bryan Kocis in 2002.

After Kocis was charged with rape,molestation of a 15 yo and filming of gay child pornography Conahan "reviewed" hundreds of hours of footage and declared all the boys in the video were of age. He refused to allow outside review of the video by Federal experts.
He allowed Kocis to accept a deal of one year probation, with no jail time and a refusal to require that Kocis register as a sex offender.

Perverted Justice if you ask me!



Luzerne County Judge in business with ex-con?



By
BY DAVE JANOSKI
STAFF WRITER
Published: Wednesday, July 16, 2008
Updated: Wednesday, July 16, 2008 1:00 AM EDT
WILKES-BARRE — Fourteen years ago, Luzerne County Judge Michael T. Conahan said allegations that he helped connect a Florida cocaine dealer with a Hazleton buyer were “bogus” stories told by “common criminals” hoping to curry favor with federal prosecutors.

Four years ago, the convicted cocaine dealer and Judge Conahan’s wife, Barbara, formed a Pompano Beach used-car business, according to an official with the company who said Monday that he met with Judge Conahan, the judge’s wife and the former dealer in Florida to discuss setting up the business in 2004.

Barbara Conahan was president of the used-car business, RAB Auto Sales Inc., according to Florida corporate documents. The former drug dealer, Ronald Belletiere, operated RAB, according to the company’s former secretary/treasurer. Florida documents indicate the company has been inactive since September 2007.

Former RAB secretary/treasurer Charles Rebhan said in a phone interview Monday that Mr. Belletiere approached him in 2004 to help set up a business that would buy used cars at auctions for resale.


Mr. Rebhan, who spent more than four decades in car sales, had previously worked with Mr. Belletiere at a Florida dealership. In spring or summer 2004, Mr. Belletiere set up a lunch meeting with Judge Conahan, his wife and Mr. Rebhan in Florida, where they discussed how the business would be set up and operated, Mr. Rebhan said.

Judge Conahan, whose financial dealings are being examined by federal agents conducting a probe of the county court, and his wife did not return phone messages seeking comment Tuesday.

Judge Conahan’s name surfaced during Mr. Belletiere’s 1991 federal trial in the “Empire” drug case involving cocaine trafficking in Hazleton in the 1980s, when Judge Conahan was a magisterial district judge in the city.

Government witness Neal DeAngelo testified Judge Conahan called him in 1986 and said he had heard Mr. DeAngelo’s brother, Paul, had been buying cocaine from a dealer who was under investigation. Judge Conahan offered to put the DeAngelos in contact with a Florida dealer, Mr. DeAngelo testified.

Mr. Belletiere, who is a former Hazleton resident, subsequently called Mr. DeAngelo at Judge Conahan’s request, according to testimony, and the DeAngelo brothers and another man traveled to Miami to buy $26,500 worth of cocaine from Mr. Belletiere.

Judge Conahan was on the prosecution’s list of witnesses for the Belletiere trial but was not called to testify. The federal prosecutor in the case, during a “sidebar” conversation with the judge out of the jury’s earshot, called Judge Conahan an “unindicted co-conspirator” in the case, according to a transcript.

In August 1994, Judge Conahan held a press conference to deny he had referred Mr. Belletiere to the DeAngelos, but he acknowledged knowing all three men, having represented their families in legal matters.

In a 2003 interview, Judge Conahan said he was exonerated by the Judicial Conduct Board, which has never commented publicly on the case. The board’s chief counsel, Joseph Massa Jr., said the board does not comment on investigations that do not lead to public charges.

Paul DeAngelo and Mr. Belletiere received reduced prison sentences in the “Empire” case upon the recommendation of federal prosecutors. Both were released in 1995. Neal DeAngelo was never charged.

The DeAngelo brothers, who operate DBi Services, which provides commercial services, including vegetation and road management, to government and business clients nationwide from its headquarters in Hazleton, did not respond to an interview request Tuesday.

Mr. Belletiere, 53, who lives in south Florida, did not respond to an interview request made through his daughter, Briana. She acknowledged her father had operated RAB Auto Sales Inc., but believed the company is no longer active.

Judge Conahan listed RAB Auto Sales on his annual financial disclosure forms filed with the state Supreme Court for 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007.

Judge Conahan, who was president judge from 2002 through 2006, announced his retirement last year at age 56 although he had six years left on his second 10-year term. He is now a senior judge primarily overseeing the county’s Drug Treatment Court.

source The Scranton Times Tribune

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