BUFFALO — A former State Supreme Court judge has pleaded guilty in connection with a prostitution sting that also involved a former Lockport police captain.
Ronald H. Tills, 73, pleaded guilty Thursday in federal court to knowingly transporting a female in interstate commerce with the intent the female engage in prostitution.
The actions were in violation of the Mann Act, and the charge carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and/or a fine of $250,000.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert C. Moscati, who handled the prosecution, said Tills admitted that in late October 2005, he and others transported a woman from Western New York out of state.
Former Lockport police captain John Trowbridge, 60, pleaded guilty in March to transporting the woman, an illegal alien identified in court papers as “Jane Doe No. 1,” to Kentucky.
Moscati said the men intended the woman to engage in prostitution with members of the Royal Order of Jesters, an international fraternal society that Tills and Trowbridge both belonged to.
As part of his plea, Tills admitted to five additional occasions of transporting a woman across state lines for prostitution.
All instances were related to the defendants’ membership in the Jesters, which held weekend meetings where it was custom to make women available for acts of prostitution, Moscati said.
Tills’ former law clerk, Michael Stebick, has pleaded guilty to the same conduct. He is awaiting sentencing.
Tills and Stebick resigned their posts within the court’s Eighth Judicial District in April.
Trowbridge, who retired from the Lockport Police Department in 2002, is scheduled for sentencing Nov. 4
Trowbridge could face a maximum of 10 years in prison or a $250,000 fine, but at the plea hearing, U.S. District Judge William Skretny said the sentence will most likely be between 12 and 18 months or a fine of $3,000 to $30,000.
An investigation by the Western District’s Human Trafficking Task Force and Alliance culminated in December with raids on four massage parlors in Lockport, Niagara Falls, Wheatfield and Tonawanda.
The women working at the massage parlors were illegal aliens from Asia. Nine women were rescued from the parlors, where investigators said they were being held as virtual captives.
Courts
COURTS: Former judge pleads guilty in prostitution sting
- Courts
-
- No Headline Provided
-
Rohde sentenced, job uncertain
It’s unknown if a suspended Niagara County Sheriff’s deputy will return to work, following his sentencing Wednesday in Lockport City Court.
Kevin J. Rohde, 31, was granted a one year conditional discharge for endangering the welfare of a child. Rohde pleaded guilty to the charge in Feburary, a charge which stems from an incident that took place with a 15-year-old girl in March 1999. Rohde was given youthful offender status, as he was 18-years-old at the time.
-
Mongielo sentenced to 15 days
David J. Mongielo faces a 15-day jail sentence for violating the town’s sign ordinance a second time, which was a violation of the first offense’s conditional discharge.
Mongielo received a pair of sentences Tuesday night in town court, the first for his 2011 violation of the ordinance. The Robinson Road auto shop owner will pay a $250 fine and receive a one-year conditional discharge. That means Mongielo will serve 15 days in jail if he violates the ordinance again over the next 12 months.
-
Diefenbach sentenced to 10 years
Not only couldn’t Hans S. Diefenbach believe he was so delusional last spring that he thought Norma Confer was trying to kill him, Diefenbach said he would have married the woman he stabbed to death if circumstances were different.
Diefenbach made that statement Thursday, just minutes before Niagara County Judge Matthew J. Murphy sentenced him to 10 years in state prison, five years of post release supervision and a $5,000 fine. -
Bartz could get probation
A Town of Lockport burglar will attempt to avoid jail time by participating in Niagara County Court’s judicial diversion program for court supervised drug treatment.
Matthew E. Bartz, 30, of Bartz Road pleaded guilty to three counts of third-degree burglary at an appearance Wednesday in State Supreme Court before Justice Richard C. Kloch, Sr. However, Bartz was also approved for the diversion program Wednesday. All three counts are nonviolent class D felonies. -
Rohde given youthful offender status
A Niagara County Sheriff’s deputy has received youthful offender status in a rape case stemming from an incident that allegedly took place 13 years ago.
Kevin J. Rohde, 30, has taken a plea without admission and will be sentenced April 25 in Lockport City Court. He had been facing first-degree rape following an incident that took place March 1, 1999, at a Remick Parkway residence, when Rohde was 18 years old. -
Former NFTA cop sentenced
A former Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority police officer will spend six years on probation for sending a sexually explicit photo to a teenage girl, a girl he later had a sexual encounter with.
In addition, John W. Ingham will spend 25 weekends in the service of the Niagara County Sheriff’s Office Work Program. Ingham was sentenced Thursday by State Supreme Court Justice Richard C. Kloch, Sr. Ingham will also register as a sex offender. -
Rapist gets 15 years
A Middleport man will serve 15 years behind bars for raping a Lockport woman at knifepoint in March.
Harold G. Case, 50, 3470 Carmen Road, was sentenced Thursday in Niagara County Court for first-degree attempted rape, a class C violent felony. Upon completion of the sentence, Case will have 15 years of post release supervision. -
Plea reached in stabbing case
Hans S. Diefenbach could be looking at 10 years in state prison, after pleading guilty to first-degree manslaughter Thursday in Niagara County Court.
Diefenbach 47, 70 Genesee St., admitted to stabbing 66-year-old Norma Confer several times with a pair of knives on April 21, leaving one of them in her back. She died in May after being in a coma for
five weeks. Diefenbach was originally charged with first-degree murder. -
Court actions published Sept. 7, 2011
Schumacher DWI case adjourned to October
A Gasport woman accused of hitting two teens on Dysinger Road on May 26 will return in the beginning of October to Lockport Town Court, after having her case adjourned Tuesday night.
Amy J. Schumacher, 36, 8472 Chestnut Ridge Road, has been charged with Class E felony aggravated vehicular assault and driving while intoxicated.
On May 26, Schumacher was driving on Dysinger Road when she swerved off the road and struck two boys who were walking on the shoulder, according to the report from the Niagara County Sheriff’s Office. According to sheriff’s deputies, Schumacher registered a 0.12 percent blood alcohol content. - More Courts Headlines





