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Here is the explosive story of the Kids for Cash scandal in
Pennsylvania, a judicial justice miscarriage that sent more than
2,500 children and teens to a for-profit detention center while two
judges lined their pockets with cash, as told by Candy J. Cooper,
an award-winning journalist and Pulitzer Prize finalist. In the
early 2000s, Judge Mark Ciavarella and Judge Michael Conahan of
Luzerne County, Pennsylvania were known as no-nonsense judges.
Juveniles who showed up in their courtrooms faced harsh words and
even harsher sentencing. In the post-Columbine era, many people
believed that was just what the county needed to ensure its
children and teens stayed on the straight and narrow path. But as
more and more children faced shocking sentences for seemingly
benign crimes, and a newly built for-profit detention center filled
up further and further, a sinister pattern of abuses and bribery
emerged. Through extensive research and original reporting leading
into contemporary times, award-winning journalist Candy J. Cooper
tells the story of a scandal that the Juvenile Law Center calls
“one of the largest and most serious violations of children’s
rights in the history of the American legal system.”
Based on original reporting by a Pulitzer Prize finalist and an
industry veteran, the first book for young adults about the Flint
water crisis In 2014, Flint, Michigan, was a cash-strapped city
that had been built up, then abandoned by General Motors. As part
of a plan to save money, government officials decided that Flint
would temporarily switch its water supply from Lake Huron to the
Flint River. Within months, many residents broke out in rashes.
Then it got worse: children stopped growing. Some people were
hospitalized with mysterious illnesses; others died. Citizens of
Flint protested that the water was dangerous. Despite what seemed
so apparent from the murky, foul-smelling liquid pouring from the
city's faucets, officials refused to listen. They treated the
people of Flint as the problem, not the water, which was actually
poisoning thousands. Through interviews with residents and
intensive research into legal records and news accounts, journalist
Candy J. Cooper, assisted by writer-editor Marc Aronson, reveals
the true story of Flint. Poisoned Water shows not just how the
crisis unfolded in 2014, but also the history of racism and
segregation that led up to it, the beliefs and attitudes that
fueled it, and how the people of Flint fought--and are still
fighting--for clean water and healthy lives.
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