ENDORSEMENT ALERT
SHERIFF & REGISTER OF WILLS
**no endorsement**
Our Endorsements for Sheriff and Register of Wills
On March 30, Philly15th voted to make no endorsement in the races for Sheriff and Register of Wills. Rather, we believe both offices should be eliminated as elected positions and their essential functions moved into existing departments within City government.
Philly15th’s decision is the first time an open ward has used the power of its endorsement to call for the elimination of these offices as elected positions.
Q&A: Sheriff
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Philadelphia has had an elected Sheriff since 1838. The Sheriff’s office is responsible for transporting prisoners to and from court, courtroom security, serving writs and warrants, and conducting Sheriff’s sales.
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The Sheriff’s office has been plagued by mismanagement and corruption for at least 20 years. Its functions could easily be moved to departments that provide greater accountability.
City Controller audits have found (1) the Sheriff’s office’s payroll and personnel system was at a “very high risk of fraud and abuse” (2008); (2) “101 service firearms and 109 PFA weapons were missing from the Sheriff’s Office inventory” (2020); and (3) the Sheriff’s office does not maintain a comprehensive accounting system to track financial transactions, fails to keep adequate records for fee revenue, and is “unable to accurately account for the fee revenue it collects.” (2022)
The Sheriff’s office has a long history of ethical issues.
—John Green, who served as Sheriff from 1988 until 2010, was sentenced to five years in prison after pleading guilty to accepting $675,000 in bribes and kickbacks for awarding $35 million in no-bid work to a vendor.
—Jewell Williams succeeded Green as Sheriff. In 2015, Inquirer investigations showed that all but one of the 20 top overtime earners in the Sheriff’s office had also contributed to Williams’s re-election campaign, and that 67 of the top 100 overtime earners made one or more contributions to Williams’s campaign since he took office in 2012. In 2017, three women accused Williams of sexual harassment, retaliation, and creating a hostile work environment. The accusations spurred the City Controller to conduct a government-wide audit of sexual harassment policies.
—Current Sheriff Rochelle Bilal took office in 2020. During her term, Bilal fired three staffers who alleged “financial impropriety and sexual harassment” (resulting in whistle-blower lawsuits), hired a former Philadelphia police officer who had been fired after being accused of sexually assault], saw her top legal aide moonlight as a criminal defense attorney, saw a Sheriff’s deputy charged for selling methamphetamine and guns to a confidential FBI informant, and was alleged to have misused funds to increase the salaries of herself and her top staffers.
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Eliminating the Sheriff’s office would require City Council to pass a proposed amendment to the Philadelphia Home Rule Charter to eliminate an elected Sheriff and voter approval of the amendment.
A 2009 report by the Committee of Seventy stated there are “relatively easy options” to transfer the Sheriff’s relatively ministerial duties elsewhere in City government, with the Finance Department and Police Department assuming duties such as warrant and civil process service, prisoner transport, court security, and sheriff’s sales.