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11:18 PM / Wednesday May 1, 2024

23 Jan 2020

Movita Johnson-Harrell sentenced to 3 months in jail for public corruption crimes

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January 23, 2020 Category: Local Posted by:

ABOVE PHOTO: Rep. Movita Johnson-Harrell

Former State Rep. Movita Johnson-Harrell has pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 3 months in prison on Thursday. She will finish out the rest of the year on house arrest.

Prosecutors charged the state representative from Philadelphia with enriching herself by stealing money from a nonprofit organization she founded to serve the mentally ill and poor who were fighting addiction.

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro’s office accused Rep. Movita Johnson-Harrell of perjury, tampering with public records, theft and other charges.

Court papers said the theft went on for years as Johnson-Harrell converted the charity’s funds into investment properties, vacations and luxury clothing. Shapiro said Johnson-Harrell personally spent more than $500,000 from Motivations Education & Consultation Associates, diverting Medicaid and Social Security disability funds.

The 53-year-old Democrat won a special election in March in a West Philadelphia district.

Johnson-Harrell, the first female Muslim member of the House, came to office with the intensely personal story of having endured the shooting deaths of her father, brother, cousin and 18-year-old son. She campaigned on a platform of ending gun violence, and is active in an anti-gun violence foundation named for her son Charles, who was shot to death in 2011.

She turned herself in to police in Philadelphia. Through her lawyers, she released a statement saying she would resign from her then $89,000-a-year House seat later in December 2019. “I

At a Harrisburg news conference, Shapiro said Johnson-Harrell engaged in “significant and systematic corruption” involving the payments intended for the people who came to her charity for help.

“Defrauding a nonprofit or defrauding taxpayers and then systematically over many years lying to cover it up is unjust, it’s unfair and it is a crime,” Shapiro said.

Prosecutors said that the nonprofit will be reorganized and that Johnson-Harrell no longer has any control over its finances. They said the money went to buy designer clothing, multiple fox coats, payments on a Porsche, tuition for a relative and travel to Mexico and Florida. They said she also spent $8,000 on criminal restitution from a 2014 conviction for not paying unemployment taxes.

Johnson-Harrell previously held a $104,000 job with the victim and witness services unit of the Philadelphia district attorney’s office. Court papers say the thefts continued even after she worked in the district attorney’s office and started serving in the state House. On a statement of financial disclosure form due in May, Johnson-Harrell reported owing the Internal Revenue Service about $50,000.

She told The Associated Press at that time that the debt went back more than a decade, from a business that helped people with special needs. She said an accountant advised her that if she had appealed in time, she would not have owed anything.

Johnson-Harrell quickly made her presence known in the Capitol. After she was sworn in to office, she objected to a colleague’s session-opening prayer that “at the name of Jesus every knee will bow.”

The lawmaker Johnson-Harrell succeeded was also charged while serving. Democrat Vanessa Lowery Brown resigned in December after being sentenced to 23 months of probation for bribery and other offenses.

Associated Press contributed to this story

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