Many of us believe in second chances. Christians make a big thing out of redemption.
I believe in second chances, but there are limits.
Limits came to mind when I read that three scoundrels — a fancy word for common criminals — were given a second chance after violating the public trust.
The employers were the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the City of Philadelphia, which are funded by taxpayers like you and me. When the trio of elected officials stole, they stole not just from the city and state, but from you and me.
And now, we are again paying their salaries.
They are on the city payroll, and I am not assuaged by the words of the mayor’s flack, Joe Grace, that the administration “supports every person’s right to a second chance in society.”
I support that, too, but they have no “right” to a city job. The fiasco put me in mind of another high-profile case that I will get to in a moment.
This is a case of once burned.
The three who did the burning are: former State Rep Movita Johnson-Harrell, who was found guilty of theft and perjury in stealing $500,000 from a nonprofit; former State Rep Leslie Acosta, who pleaded guilty to a money laundering conspiracy at a low-income health clinic, and the piece de resistance, former Traffic Court Judge Willie Singletary, who got kicked off the bench for sexual harassment in 2011 (showing pictures of his penis to a female employee), then convicted in 2014 for lying to the FBI about fixing tickets.
I had this gem on my bull’s eye in a 2012 column, which has added unbelievable detail.
If you didn’t click on the link, you did not learn that before election to Traffic Court, he ran up $11,500 in violations, leading to his driver’s license being yanked. And telling a motorcycle club if they gave him money, he would take care of them.
This is a guy Mayor Cherelle Parker believes is deserving of another chance?
It’s like the people wanting to release the Menendez brothers for killing their parents for alleged sexual abuse. If it were true, all they had to do was run away from home, as generations of abused kids have done, without resorting to murder.
Oh! The high-profile case, I mentioned.
After he had served time in prison for running a dog-fighting ring, former Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick was hired by Eagles owner Jeff Lurie, in another second-chance gesture. The contract offer was approved by Eagles head coach Andy Reid. Well, Vick wasn’t the first football felon.
At the time, I wrote that Vick had great quarterbacking skills.
Readers asked if I thought he would be hired.
“I said yes. He would go through the now-familiar process – counseling, rehab, remorse, jail. He would emerge and find a hungry team desperate enough to take him and his freight-car baggage.
I never dreamed it would be my team.”
He didn’t just run the ring. He participated in vicious cruelty to helpless dogs.
In the end, I would be hypocritical to say it is OK for him to play for other teams, but not mine. I resigned to him being an Eagles quarterback.
I also resigned myself to wearing no Eagles gear until Vick was either gone, or demonstrated true remorse.
Later, working with the Humane Society of the U.S. in its anti-dogfighting campaign, he put his money and his mouth on the line and did express what seemed like sincere remorse and regret.
Back at City Hall, have Singletary, Acosta, and Johnson-Harrell done their time in the pillory? Have we seen sincere remorse and regret?
The Inquirer quoted Phillip Hensley-Robin, of Common Cause Pennsylvania, as saying, “There are many Philadelphians manifestly qualified for these roles who have not been involved in notable scandals.”
The city deserves a government that upholds the highest standards, he said.
The city needs to “demonstrate that each hire is the best fit for their role,” said Lauren Cristella, director of the good-government Committee of Seventy.
This did not happen in the current case. Vick was hired by a private employer, and paid with private funds. The three Philly felons are being paid with public money, and with little public remorse.
It is a black mark on Parker’s record.
Well the DA doesn’t pay his taxes (nor back taxes) so I guess everyone can do whatever the hell they want to
He also hired Movita before Rochelle did, as a $500 a day consultant, but the Inquirer couldn’t bear to tell that to their readers. That’s because everybody on the staff has a slobbering love Jones for Larry.
As a Sanctuary City, Philadelphia has enshrined law-breakers, so I should not be surprised. All criminals are victims to the Krasner crowd.
Hey Stan, isn’t that what that Bucks County Election Commissioner Democrat broad said last week? That it was wrong, but she was doing it anyway, because everyone does it! Seems to be the attitude of the contemporary Democrat Party.
If someone pays the penalty they do deserve a “second chance in society.” But they most certainly, absolutely, positively do NOT deserve to hold the same or similar position in which they committed their crime. That is the classic definition of insanity, or perhaps progressivism.
Good Article. I agree. Is it meant to be a joke? We are a Nation that just elected a convicted Felon, and sexual predator for President of the U.S.A.
A man who REFUSED to accept the results of the 2020 election. A man who ate watched t.v. and did nothing as rioters attacked our Capital, Police officers, and threatened to murder the Vice President. Now he wants to do away with background checks for cabinet members. …..And Trumpsters on this thread are actually expressing outrage at Parker for hiring thugs. Rich. We are a Nation that has lost it’s moral compass.
Excellent point. I’m disgusted.
He was elected by the majority, not hired by a political machine. Huge difference, not that you care. I am sure you will use the felony line again.
You said it Stu! The Philly revolving door between shame and tge rehire. I wonder if they kept their pensions?
You’d think the #metoo folk would be out for Singletary.
As the Christian apologist C.S. Lewis famously said (and I paraphrase): “If my housekeeper steals five pounds from me and asks for forgiveness, I do forgive him — but I keep an eye on him going forward.” Apparently in Philadelphia no one has been keeping an eye on the thieves; rather, they have been given cushy jobs and a place at the public trough. Shame on the Mayor!
Boy, Vince, you got a lot of balls, having just approved the “hiring” or convicted felon and rapist. It’s laughably hypocritical. So shame on YOU.
You’ve pointed out a really key element to forgiveness–repentance. Without the latter, there can be no forgiveness. At least, that’s my view.
I believe in second chances. I would offer the three felons jobs as street cleaners of work on a trash truck. If they turned the job down they can look elsewhere. The mayor has two strikes against her and they are both political moves. One is building the 76’ers arena to pay back the building trades union for political donations that helped get her elected. Two is hiring the three felons to take jobs i’m sure they are not qualified to do. Hey Ms Mayor I know a couple of felons that are more qualified than the three you hired where can they apply?
Hey — I know a couple of NON felons who are qualified. You are correct. Strike 2.
I had high hopes for Parker, I thought she seemed honest and full of common sense. Her support of the arena took care of that for me. It’s a terrible idea from a cultural, land use, traffic and common sense point of view. I don’t know why they never considered a location like Franklin Mills, for example. Someone got paid off bigly, I’m sure.
Same here. I was hoping for at least some integrity, but that seems to be gone forever with our last great Mayor, Michael Nutter. Instead, seems to be back in the gutter, ala the John Street/Jim Kenney fleece-jobs. If it ain’t nailed down, it’s going home with someone! Also, you mention Franklin Mills. I was really, really hoping they’d go to Camden, forever! By the way, I enjoy your posts.
Excellent article, Stu. I agree with Sara T.