The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Prison guard sues AG Shapiro over scuttled prosecutio­n

- By Michael Rubinkam

One of seven prison guards named in a highly publicized sexual abuse case three years ago filed a federal lawsuit against Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro, accusing him of malicious prosecutio­n after the charges were ultimately dropped.

Shapiro and his office acted recklessly when they charged Lackawanna County Prison guard Paul Voglino with sexually assaulting a female inmate around 2002 or 2003, and should have known the accuser had fabricated her story in hopes of getting a financial payout, the lawsuit said.

Prosecutor­s quietly dropped the case against

Voglino in August 2019, more than a year after his arrest, and he got his job back a few months later.

“The defendants ruined Paul Voglino’s life by filing scurrilous criminal charges against him when they knew the alleged victim had given law enforcemen­t officers false informatio­n,” Voglino’s attorneys, Joseph D’Andrea and Timothy Hinton, said in a statement Monday.

“The damage they caused Paul Voglino can never be repaired. We are seeking to hold the defendants accountabl­e and force them to explain why they acted so outrageous­ly,” the statement said.

The suit, filed Friday, accuses Shapiro, two subordinat­es and a state police trooper of violating Voglino’s

civil rights. It seeks monetary damages.

Shapiro’s spokespers­on, Jacklin Rhoads, said that prosecutor­s were following a grand jury’s recommenda­tion in bringing charges. “This lawsuit is nothing but grandstand­ing and an attempt to distract from the abuse that occurred at Lackawanna County Prison,” said Rhoads, adding that “we will defend our investigat­ion to the fullest extent.”

Shapiro traveled to Scranton for a news conference in February 2018 to announce the results of the grand jury’s probe into what he called a “persistent culture of abuse” that has plagued the scandal-ridden lockup for more than a decade. He said the abuse was widely known, broadly hinting at a cover-up.

Seven guards were charged, but only three of those cases resulted in conviction­s.

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