Bureau of Prisons Secretary Sentenced to Federal Prison for Sexual Abuse of a Ward

DENVER (LAWFUEL) – Janine Sligar, age 47, presently of Wray, Colorado, was sentenced Thursday to serve 6 months in federal prison for the sexual abuse of a ward. Following her prison sentence, Sligar was ordered to serve 5 years of supervised release. She was also ordered to register as a sex offender. She is scheduled to surrender to a facility designated by the Bureau of Prisons on March 2, 2009.

Janine Sligar was indicted by a federal grand jury in Denver on July 22, 2008. She pled guilty before U.S. District Court Judge Robert E. Blackburn on October 3, 2008. Sligar was sentenced by Judge Blackburn on January 29, 2009.

According to the stipulated facts contained in the plea agreement, Sligar, a 14 year veteran with the Bureau of Prisons, had a physical sexual relationship with an inmate she met while he cleaned her office. They met in February 2007. The relationship started in July of 2007, and ended in October 2007. The two had relations between 10 and 20 times in a staff restroom. Sligar worked at the Federal Prison Camp in Florence, Colorado.

Sligar also admitted to using the camera on her cell phone to take graphic pictures of a sexual nature.

This case was investigated by Craig Trautner, a Special Agent with the United States Department of Justice’s Office of the Inspector General.

The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Linda McMahan.


Partners at K & L Gates and Chicago’s Bell Boyd & Lloyd are scheduled to vote Friday on whether to merge their two firms.

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Partners at K & L Gates and Chicago’s Bell Boyd & Lloyd are scheduled to vote Friday on whether to merge their two firms.

The firms disclosed their talks in December. If approved, the merger would boost K&L Gates’ head count to 1,950 lawyers and expand its footprint to the Chicago market. It also would strengthen the Pittsburgh-based giant’s intellectual property and investment management practices.

“There’s a high level of confidence on both sides” that the merger will go through, says K&L Gates chairman Peter Kalis.

Combined 2008 revenues for the two firms were approximately $1.09 billion, a K&L Gates spokesman says. K&L Gates grossed $959.5 million in 2008, up 27 percent from 2007. That would suggest the 250-lawyer Bell Boyd grossed $130.5 million in 2008, up 1.2 percent. Its 2008 figures have not yet been published.

Neither firm brings bank debt to the table, Kalis says. That in part explains why it’s possible to accomplish the merger in a recession, he says, since K&L will not need to borrow to set up new offices or cover costs from the transition.

“We’re able to grow in a downturn like other firms can’t,” Kalis says. “We feel it is a great opportunity for prudent expansion of the platform. And that’s what a no-debt policy affords you.”

If approved, the merger will be the eighth since Kalis became chairman in 1997. Most recently, on July 1 the firm closed a merger with Kennedy Covington Lobdell & Hickman in Charlotte, N.C.

In addition to Chicago, K&L Gates will pick up a San Diego office. The 25 lawyers employed by Bell Boyd in Washington, D.C. will fold into K&L’s office there, Kalis says.

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