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Ex-police chief in Pa. gets jail for check theft

‘If a public official doesn’t have respect for the law, how can anyone else?’ the judge said regarding the request for probation

By Joelle Farrell and Kathleen Brady Shea
The Philadelphia Inquirer

CHESTER, Pa. — A former Chester Township police chief was sentenced to nine to 23 months in jail Tuesday on charges stemming from his theft of an insurance check that he used for a down payment on a Cadillac Escalade.

Booker T. Wilson, 49, of Chester, was working part time at a halfway house in Chester in 2007 when he took a check for more than $6,600 intended for a former resident, prosecutors said.

Wilson, who had been police chief in the Delaware County township since 2004, resigned in October when he pleaded guilty to forgery and receiving stolen property.

Wilson’s attorney, John J. List, asked the judge for probation or home monitoring rather than jail time.

But Chester County Court Judge William P. Mahon argued that jail was appropriate given Wilson’s position.

“He’s a public official,” Mahon said. “If a public official doesn’t have respect for the law, how can anyone else?”

The sentence that Mahon imposed on Wilson reached the higher end of the guidelines for forgery. He also sentenced Wilson to five years of probation and ordered him to repay $6,657.26 in restitution.

Booker is set to report to the Chester County jail on Monday, List said.

Wilson was charged in Chester County because that’s where he bought the vehicle.

Soon after he was charged, Wilson reached out to the judge on the case, who happened to be his former boss. District Judge James Charley is a former Chester Township police chief, and he had hired Wilson as a police officer.

Charley told prosecutors that he received a phone call at his home.

“I recognized his voice right away,” Charley told prosecutors, according to court records. Wilson asked Charley if he could meet him the following day. He talked about court records and the media.

“I said, ‘We shouldn’t be having this conversation,’” Charley told prosecutors.

Charley disclosed the information before a hearing in 2008. He said he felt he could be fair, according to court records.

But after a conference in Charley’s chambers, Charley decided to recuse himself.

“I guess I am now a witness,” he said, according to court documents.

The state Attorney General’s Office, which prosecuted the case against Wilson, agreed. But Mahon denied the prosecution’s attempt to subpoena Charley as a witness.

Wilson pleaded guilty just before his trial was to begin.

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