The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Former state lawmaker pleads guilty to stealing from charity

- By Mark Scolforo

A former state representa­tive faces three months in the Philadelph­ia jail after pleading guilty Thursday to charges she took money from a charity she establishe­d for the needy and spent it on vacations, clothing and other personal needs.

Former Rep. Movita Johnson-Harrell entered the pleas in Philadelph­ia, more than a month after she resigned in the wake of charges from the state attorney general’s office.

Johnson-Harrell, 53, was also sentenced to 8 1/2 months of house arrest and must repay the nonprofit. She will turn over real estate that will be sold to help pay the restitutio­n.

The organizati­on, Motivation­s Education and Consultati­on Associates, aims to help the homeless, seniors, children and people with mental health or substance abuse challenges, among others.

Johnson-Harrell, a west Philadelph­ia Democrat, won a special election last year for the House seat that had become vacant when her predecesso­r, Vanessa Lowery Brown, was sentenced to probation on a bribery conviction. “Movita is an exceptiona­l woman who will serve her sentence, and then return to her mission of advocacy,” her attorney, Jessica Natali, said in a written statement.

She pleaded no contest to misdemeano­r charges related to campaign and state financial reports and guilty to felony theft and perjury.

“This Philadelph­ia community would have been in a better place had this former public official invested MECA’s money into the people who needed the care she promised,” Attorney General Shapiro said in a statement.

Johnson-Harrell was the first Muslim woman to serve in the state House, campaignin­g on a platform of ending gun violence, and had worked in the victim and witness services unit of the Philadelph­ia district attorney’s office.

 ?? JOSE F. MORENO/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP, FILE ?? In this 2018 file photo, Movita Johnson-Harrell looks on after getting introduced, during a press conference at the District Attorney’s Office in Philadelph­ia.
JOSE F. MORENO/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP, FILE In this 2018 file photo, Movita Johnson-Harrell looks on after getting introduced, during a press conference at the District Attorney’s Office in Philadelph­ia.

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