The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

O’Neill fills new post in specialty courts

- By Carl Hessler Jr. chessler@21st-centurymed­ia. com @MontcoCour­tNews on Twitter

NORRISTOWN » The Montgomery County judge who oversees Drug Treatment Court has been appointed to fill a newly-created administra­tive post on the 23-member bench.

Judge Steven T. O’Neill was appointed as the administra­tive judge for all treatment courts, an announceme­nt made this week when President Judge Thomas M. DelRicci unveiled judicial assignment­s for the period Jan. 1, 2018, through Dec. 31, 2019.

“Judge O’Neill will supervise all of our specialty courts,” DelRicci said. “That’s a brand new administra­tive position.”

Those specialty courts include Drug Treatment Court, Behavioral Health Court and Veterans’ Treatment Court.

“That work that we’re doing has just gotten too large and it’s very complex because you’re dealing with not only the Department of Probation and Parole and the service agencies that assist us in providing for the needs of those people in those programs, but there’s also a lot of grant applicatio­ns and things like that that have to be taken care of,” DelRicci explained.

“It’s a huge job and to throw that under the role of the administra­tive judge of the Criminal Division means that the person just doesn’t have time to do both, so I split that up,” added DelRicci, explaining the rationale behind the creation of the new administra­tive post.

O’Neill previously was the administra­tive judge for the Criminal Division. But Judge Thomas C. Branca will officially move into that position come January.

O’Neill was appointed to the county bench in April 2002 by then Governor Mark S. Schweiker and was sworn in on July 29, 2002, as a county judge, according to his biography. O’Neill was then elected to a 10year term in 2004 and was retained for another 10-year term in 2014.

O’Neill, a 1975 graduate of Drexel University who received his law degree from Villanova University in 1978, has been assigned to the criminal division since 2007. Additional­ly, O’Neill launched the drug treatment court and has overseen its operation for 11 years.

DelRicci, who was installed as president judge in January and who was retained during the Nov. 7 election for another 10year term on the bench, announced other judicial assignment­s this week.

Judge Carolyn T. Carluccio was appointed to be the new administra­tive judge for the Family Court Division.

Judge Lois E. Murphy will remain as the administra­tive judge of the Orphans’ Court Division while Judge Thomas P. Rogers will remain the administra­tive judge of the Civil Court Division, which he has helmed for the last year. Judge Wendy Demchick-Alloy will remain administra­tive judge of the Juvenile Court Division, according to DelRicci.

Judge Cheryl L. Austin will helm Veterans’ Treatment Court, which previously was overseen by Judge Todd D. Eisenberg. Establishe­d in April 2011, the Veterans’ Treatment Court addresses the needs of veterans cycling through the court and prison system.

Judge Gary S. Silow will continue to oversee Behavioral Health Court, which was establishe­d in 2009 and addresses the needs of people with serious mental health problems who are progressin­g through the court and prison systems.

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 ??  ?? President Judge Thomas M. DelRicci
President Judge Thomas M. DelRicci
 ??  ?? Judge Steven T. O’Neill
Judge Steven T. O’Neill

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