Friday, May 30, 2014

Former Phila. Judge Willis W. Berry Jr. arrested on corruption charges


Willis W. Berry Jr.'s decision to run his real estate business out of his judicial office got him suspended from his Philadelphia judgeship in 2009, and in April, a real estate deal cost him his license to practice law.

Now, those dealings could put him behind bars.

On Thursday, state Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane announced that her office had charged Berry with theft and conflict of interest for running the business from his judicial chambers for more than a decade.

Berry, 71, surrendered to Philadelphia police Thursday morning and spent several hours behind bars before being released on his own recognizance by Magistrate Francis J. Rebstock. Rebstock, who addressed Berry as "judge" during a brief arraignment, set a preliminary hearing for May 27. As The Inquirer reported in 2007, Berry, then a Common Pleas Court judge, moonlighted as a landlord, renting a string of derelict properties in North Philadelphia and managing them out of his office at the courthouse.

Berry had his judicial secretary, Carol Fleming, collect rent, place ads for the apartments, handle maintenance complaints, and attend hearings in landlord-tenant court - all on the taxpayers' dime.

According to a criminal complaint filed by Kane's office, Berry bilked Philadelphia taxpayers out of $110,000 by using Fleming to run his business during the work day. She was Berry's primary contact for tenants at his 16 rental properties - some rundown, vermin infested, and beset with code violations.

The judge listed his official court address and office telephone in advertisements of apartment vacancies.

He used court computers, telephones, and fax machines for his business and had his tipstaff, Henry Reddy, moonlight as handyman at the properties.

All of this led to Berry's suspension from the bench without pay for four months in 2009. The state's Court of Judicial Discipline called the judge's conduct "flat-out wrong," and judicial investigators said his actions amounted to the crime of a "theft of services."

That led to criminal investigations - but no charges - by the state Attorney General's office and former District Attorney Lynne Abraham.

What changed to cause the filing of Thursday's charges is unclear. According to court documents, Kane's office initiated a new investigation last year after a citizen complaint was forwarded to prosecutors by State Rep. Garth Everett, a Lycoming County Republican.

Last November, according to the affidavit of probable cause, state investigators interviewed Fleming, who corroborated her testimony before the Judicial Conduct Board and said she spent about 528 hours a year on Berry's real estate business.

Based on an hourly rate calculated on Fleming's $44,000-a-year salary as judicial secretary, investigators estimated that $110,880 in taxpayers money was spent on Berry's private business over a decade.

Berry's longtime lawyer, Samuel C. Stretton, angrily denounced Kane's decision to bring charges, saying Berry had already been punished by a state judicial oversight panel.

"I have no idea why bring these charges now," Stretton said. "It makes no sense. It's outrageous."

Full Article & Source:
Former Phila. Judge Willis W. Berry Jr. arrested on corruption charges

See Also:
Ex-judge's lawyer questions corruption charges

Supreme Court suspends former Phila. judge's law license

2 comments:

  1. Did he really expect to get away with that?

    ReplyDelete
  2. It's outrageous, all right, Mr. Stetton, but not for the reasons you think.

    Seriously, he said that? Outrageous?

    ReplyDelete