The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Judge ponders reinstated charges in frat death case

- By Mark Scolforo

BELLEFONTE, PA. » A prosecutor Thursday used a press release to sharply criticize a judge hearing the case against former Penn State fraternity members charged in a pledge’s drinking death. Defense attorneys accused her of violating rules of profession­al conduct.

“While this case may be unusual and novel in complexity and number of defendants, the court has an obligation to handle it properly and be fair to both sides,” Centre County District Attorney Stacy Parks Miller wrote in a statement. “To date, it has failed miserably.”

Parks Miller was not in the courtroom as her sevenpage news release was sent out to reporters at the same time that Common Pleas Court Judge Pamela Ruest was presiding over a hearing on whether to reinstate serious charges in the case that have been dismissed.

Parks Miller said Ruest would not let her participat­e by phone from out of town.

Defense lawyers argued the release was highly inappropri­ate and their clients were harmed by it.

“This press release violates the rules of profession­al conduct six different ways from Sunday,” defense attorney Michael Engle told the judge, asking her to raise the matter with the body that investigat­es lawyer misconduct.

Defense attorney Frank Fina said Parks Miller was engaged in a type of “public litigation” that compromise­d the defendants’ rights.

“A prosecutor deploying outside influences to try and get his or her way inside the courtroom — it’s inherently contrary to the entire structure of the system, the entire way it’s supposed to be,” Fina argued.

Ruest has to decide whether to let prosecutor­s pursue dismissed charges in the case, and if she should appoint a new magisteria­l district judge to handle those re-filed charges in the Feb. 4 death of 19-yearold Tim Piazza of Lebanon, New Jersey. She did not indicate Thursday when she will rule.

Twenty-six people currently face criminal charges related to Piazza’s death, which occurred two days after he suffered a series of falls and consumed a dangerous amount of alcohol during a pledge bid night at the Penn State chapter of Beta Theta Pi. Some fraternity members face charges that could result in prison terms, while others are accused of hazing and alcohol violations.

After an unusually hardfought preliminar­y hearing, which lasted seven days over three months, District Judge Allen Sinclair on Sept. 1 threw out many of the charges, including the most serious allegation­s of involuntar­y manslaught­er and aggravated assault. The district attorney subsequent­ly refiled many of those counts and sought a new judge.

Sinclair “simply did not understand the theory and made many incongruou­s rulings by binding over some charges and dismissing others,” prosecutor Michael Osterberg argued to Ruest.

Defense attorneys told Ruest that Sinclair’s decision did not amount to legal error, so the dismissed charges should not be revived.

“Just because you disagree with the judge’s ruling doesn’t give you a second bite,” argued defense attorney Ted Simon.

Sinclair also ruled there was evidence to send other charges to for trial, and they are currently pending in county court.

On Nov. 13, Parks Miller announced the FBI had helped recover erased security camera footage from the fraternity basement, providing evidence that Piazza had been given at least 18 drinks over less than 90 minutes.

That led her to file entirely new charges. A preliminar­y hearing for those “basement tapes” charges, which had been scheduled for next week in Bellefonte, has been postponed.

 ?? PHOEBE SHEEHAN — CENTRE DAILY TIMES VIA AP, FILE ?? District Judge Allen Sinclair arrives for the seventh day of preliminar­y hearings at the Centre County Courthouse in Bellefonte, Pa.
PHOEBE SHEEHAN — CENTRE DAILY TIMES VIA AP, FILE District Judge Allen Sinclair arrives for the seventh day of preliminar­y hearings at the Centre County Courthouse in Bellefonte, Pa.

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