Dick Wolf, who created �Law & Order� and its two
successful spin-offs, �Law & Order: SVU� and �Law & Order: Criminal
Intent,� should probably consider establishing a branch office in Pennsylvania.
It seems that whenever any of the New York City cops take a
road trip to find a fugitive or track down a witness, they go to Pennsylvania.
Apparently, New Jersey is only a buffer zone.
Part of the reason why Pennsylvania routinely figures into
the hour-long dramas may be because Wolf, a New Yorker, is a graduate of the
University of Pennsylvania. Another possibility, although much more remote, may
be because his first of three wives was named Susan Scranton.
Nevertheless, Pennsylvania has been the site of sufficient
plots the past couple of years as the three TV series have increased their
levels of social consciousness.
Pennsylvania�s attorney general has already issued 25 arrest
warrants for state legislators and their aides of both political parties -- including
former House Speaker John Perzel, a Republican, and Bill DeWeese, the House
Democratic majority leader. They are accused of a variety of charges, including
theft, conflict of interest, obstruction, and conspiracy.
But it is northeastern Pennsylvania that is fertile ground
for the writers. Luzerne County, with Wilkes-Barre as the county seat, has
provided the background for an episode of �Law & Order: SVU.� The episode
aired in May 2009 had a plot set in New York City but featured Pennsylvania
misconduct that included an undercurrent of corrupt judges who took kickbacks
for sentencing juveniles to a privately run juvenile detention center. (An
episode of ABC-TV�s �The Good Wife,� which aired in December 2009, also
featured the plot about a corrupt judge who sent cases to a private detention
center.) When that plot finally plays out, there are also stories to be
developed about corrupt courthouse officials, corrupt school board officials
and, just recently, the vice chairman of the county board of commissioners, a
former pro football player, who accepted a bribe.
Nearby Schuylkill County, specifically the people of
Shenandoah, played a critical part in an April 2009 �Law & Order� hate
crime story about the beating and murder by teens of an undocumented Hispanic
worker. In Shenandoah, 25-year-old Luis Eduardo Ramirez Zavala, an undocumented
Mexican with no criminal history, was beaten by a gang of high school football
players in July 2008. In the �Law & Order� episode, the victim was also an
undocumented Hispanic who was targeted by a gang of high school basketball
players who had anonymously made a video, �Beaner Hunt: Taking Back America One
Street at a Time.� In both the Ramirez Zavala case and the fictional �Law &
Order� case, a mother covers up evidence; people in the town spew racial
hatred, with many claiming if the victim wasn�t an �illegal,� he would still be
alive; a �windbag� TV pundit rants about illegals taking over the country; and
a jury refuses to present a guilty verdict on all but the least of the charges
against the teens.
The Ramirez Zavala murder is likely to provide seed for
several more episodes. This past week, the FBI arrested two teens who had been
convicted by an all-White jury only of simple assault, and four police
officers, including the chief. Derrick Donchak, 19, and Brandon Piekarski, 18,
are charged with federal hate crimes. A third teen, Colin J. Walsh, had
accepted a plea bargain and is in federal prison. Among the charges against
Chief Matthew Nestor, Lt. William Moyer, and Officer Jason Hayes are conspiracy
to obstruct justice for allegedly manipulating and covering up the facts of the
murder; Moyer was also charged with witness and evidence tampering and
providing false testimony to the FBI. In an unrelated case, Nestor and Capt.
James Gennarini are charged with several counts of extortion and civil rights
violations in illegal gambling operations. An unindicted coconspirator is
Brandon Piekarsky�s mother, Tammy, who was dating Officer Hayes. U.S. District
Court judge Malachy Mannion at the arraignment said that the evidence against
the officers was �strong,� and that they depict a �vile set of activities.�
Another �Law & Order� episode could focus upon the death
of 18-year-old David Vega, who Shenandoah police claimed hanged himself in the
town�s jail in November 2004. The police could have issued a citation to Vega,
who was arguing about a Giants�Eagles football game with friends and relatives,
all of whom were vocal, none of whom had attacked anyone. But, the police
arrested Vega, locked him in the town jail, and then within two hours claimed
he had committed suicide by hanging. A more realistic story would be the brutal
beating by racist police and a subsequent cover-up, combined with the coroner
accepting the police version. No charges were filed against Chief Matthew
Nestor; Capt. Raymond Nestor (the chief�s father), or James Gennarini, who are
alleged to have beaten Vega. Vega�s parents, however, have filed suit in the
U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania. Attorney John P.
Karoly, Allentown, says that based upon an independent investigation and
several depositions, there is �significant evidence� to back up charges against
the police. The suit charges that an independent second autopsy confirmed that
Vega �suffered extensive, massive injuries consistent with a profound beating�
and �did not die of hanging.�
Police neglect and an attack upon David N. Murphy Sr., an
Afro-American, who was recovering at home from spinal fusion surgery, could be
the base of another episode. In March 2009, according to a civil law suit filed
by Karoly in federal court, Chief Matthew Nestor and Officer George Carado, who
lied about having a warrant, arrested Murphy on a claim he was selling
prescription medicine to his wife, refused to allow him to take needed
medication, punched him in his back, and left him alone overnight in the police
station. During the night, Murphy had a heart attack and lay on the floor
several hours crying out in pain. However, before seeking medical treatment,
Shenandoah police took Murphy for arraignment before a district justice. The DJ
ordered the police to take Murphy to a hospital. Instead, the police, according
to Karoly, who is also Murphy�s attorney, took him to the Schuylkill County
prison. Only when the prison wouldn�t admit him because of his medical
condition did Shenandoah police take the victim to a hospital.
In a sworn affidavit, Murphy says Nestor told him that the
police �would harass me and put me in jail as soon as I come to Shenandoah if I
filed a lawsuit or tried to press charges on him,� and that if Murphy filed
suit, �I wouldn�t make it out of the police station�s cells next time.� The
complaint further alleges that �Nestor said I could end up like the Mexican
that hung himself, that tapes can be erased or edited.� (The Shenandoah police
station did not have surveillance cameras at the time of Vega�s death.)
�Law & Order� writers could also look at a �suicide� in
Coaldale, about 20 miles east of Shenandoah. James Hill, 17, was visiting Greg
Altenbach and his parents in January 2004. A corrupt police chief performed
only a cursory investigation and decided that Hill committed suicide with a .22
semi-automatic rifle. However, Police Chief Shawn Nihen rejected a coroner�s
report that concluded Hill couldn�t have killed himself. Nihen, who was friends
with the family in whose house Hill died, as well as Altenbach�s mother, stepfather,
and a friend who witnessed the accidental shooting, had tried to cover up
evidence. Nihen also had known that Shawn Becker, the stepfather, was forbidden
by the courts to have a gun in the house. Nihen and Coaldale police officer
Michael Weaver were later convicted of planting evidence in several cases.
Altenbach later acknowledged he had fired the gun, and is now in prison after
conviction for involuntary manslaughter and aggravated assault.
Future stories of �Law and Order� may continue to be �ripped
from the headlines,� but in northeastern Pennsylvania, they are torn from greed
and racial and cultural hatred.
Walter M. Brasch, an award-winning former
newspaper reporter and editor, is a syndicated social issues columnist, author,
writer-producer, and professor of journalism at Bloomsburg University. His
latest books are Sex and the Single
Beer Can, a probing and humorous look at the nation�s media; and Sinking
the Ship of State: The Presidency of George W. Bush, with a focus upon the shredding of Constitutional protections. Both
books are available at amazon.com, and other bookstores. You may contact Dr.
Brasch through his website, www.walterbrasch.com.