Following years of drama, litigation, and scandal, the
ribbon was officially cut Thursday on the new $122.3 million Family Court
building at 15th and Arch Streets.
Speakers included a who's who among Philadelphia and
state court officials, many of whom were inside the marble-laden lobby for the
first time, including former Gov. Ed Rendell; Kevin M. Dougherty,
administrative judge; and Ronald D. Castille, chief justice of the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court.
"What they get will be equal to what they see
here," Castille said. "Here, sad, tragic cases will be dealt with
dignity and efficiency."
Combining all Family Court cases under a single roof, the
15-floor building is a sizable upgrade over the cramped and overused
courthouses at 34 S. 11th St. and 1801 Vine St., which often had lines of
families spilling onto the streets.
"Every day, our job is to unite families as best we
can," Dougherty said. "Today, we're uniting the entire courthouse for
the first time in a long time."
The 544,000-square-foot site includes a second-floor
holding and processing area, nine floors of administrative offices and judges'
chambers, a staff training facility, and 29 courtrooms.
Supervising Judge Margaret T. Murphy said the dilapidated
former sites were giving families a negative impression. "This is to send
the impression that family courts matter, family issues matter, and we intend
to create a safe haven where we can address their needs," Murphy said.
Initially given a $200 million budget, the project to
build a modern courthouse was scheduled to be completed last year. But a 2010
Inquirer report disclosed that Philadelphia lawyer Jeffrey B. Rotwitt had been
working both sides of the deal.
Rotwitt was hired to secure the court site in 2006 by
Sandra Schultz Newman, a state Supreme Court justice and liaison to the
Philadelphia courts. In 2007, Newman retired from the court and was succeeded
as liaison by Castille, a former Philadelphia district attorney.
Castille terminated the deal three years later, after the
newspaper reported that Rotwitt had arranged a 50/50 partnership with developer
Donald W. Pulver and was charging excessive fees to the state.
Rotwitt was subsequently fired by his firm, Obermayer,
Rebmann, Maxwell & Hippel, where he had been a top associate for 35 years.
In 2011, Castille sued Rotwitt and Obermayer Rebmann,
claiming he had been duped and had expected nothing short of absolute loyalty
from Rotwitt.
Obermayer paid $2 million to the courts after a
settlement was reached in 2012, with another $2 million paid by the firm's
insurer. Both payments went toward the budget of the new building. Rotwitt
agreed to the settlement but did not have to pay any money.
"We've had problems along the way," Castille
said Thursday. "I'm not going to rehash them."
The court will begin hearing cases in the new building
Nov. 17.
Source: Philly.com
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