Michael A. Cicconetti | |
---|---|
8th Ohio Municipal Court Judge for Painesville, Ohio | |
In office January 1994 – September 22, 2019 | |
Governor | |
Preceded by | Neil R. Wilson |
Succeeded by | James R. O'Leary |
President of the American Judges Association | |
In office 2005–06 | |
President of the Northern Ohio Municipal Judges' Association | |
In office 1997–98 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Michael Anthony Cicconetti April 24, 1951 |
Nationality | American |
Political party | Republican (since February, 2020) |
Other political affiliations | Democratic (before February, 2020) |
Spouse | Kelly Cicconetti |
Children | 5 |
Alma mater | Saint Leo University, Cleveland State University |
Awards | American Judges Association’s Chief Justice Richard W. Holmes Award of Merit |
Nickname | Judge Chick |
Michael A. Cicconetti (born 1951) is a retired Municipal Court judge who presided in Painesville, Lake County, Ohio, United States, dispensing a unique brand of what he calls creative justice. The judge often left the choice of penalty to the defendant, who was faced with spending time in jail or undergoing one of Cicconetti's unusual punishments. These often involved placing the defendant in a similar position to that of the defendant's victim at the time of the crime.
Cicconetti's first creative sentence, which involved a violation relating to a stopped school bus, occurred in the mid-1990s.[1] Famously he offered 26-year-old Ohio housewife Michelle Murray the option (in return for a reduced prison sentence) of spending a night in the woods for abandoning 35 kittens in a forest in wintertime;[2] he said: "You don't do that. You don't leave these poor little animals out and, yes, I wanted to set an example for her future conduct or anybody else who was contemplating doing such a thing". On other occasions he ordered noisy neighbors to spend a day of silence in the forest or listen to classical music instead of rock. In all cases the judge attempted to place a link between the perpetrated offense and its punishment.
Due in part to the popularity of his actions, he won the presidency of the American Judges Association.[3] He attributes his unusual approach to his background. He is an Eagle Scout, earning the award in 1964, as a member of Scout Troop 64 in Painesville, Ohio. He was the oldest of nine siblings who had to work on ore boats throughout the Great Lakes as a deckhand and deckwatch to fund himself through college. After graduating from St. Leo University, he became Clerk of the Painesville Municipal Court while attending Cleveland State University Law School at night.[4]
Where the national recidivism (repeat offender) rate is over 75%, the rate in Judge Cicconetti's court was just 10%.[5]
His philosophy is exemplified by the following quotation:
When you engage people and praise them for their good behavior, not unlike children, it helps their self-esteem. My judicial philosophy is really not that much different from a parental philosophy. I have five children. You can paddle them or spank them but what do you gain? Most people want to be good but for little obstacles or habits. We have to change the habits and remove the obstacles. That's our job.
Sentences such as Cicconetti's are becoming more popular across the United States, and one judge has cited him specifically as being the influence for one of her own sentences.[6]
In February 2019 Cicconetti announced that he planned to retire later in the year.[7][8] He retired from being a judge on September 22, 2019.[9]
Other government offices Cicconetti has held include a four-year term on the Painesville Township Board of Education, and fourteen years as a Painesville Township Trustee. He was previously a member of the Coalition of Justice Associations, and served as president of the Northern Ohio Municipal Judges' Association.[10]
Formerly having been a lifelong member of the Democratic Party, he switched to the Republican Party, so he could vote for his son, Gabe, who ran for Recorder of Lake County, Ohio in 2020.[18] In that same statement he said that he did not regret the choice, citing comments made by then-Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer about Supreme Court Justices [Brett Kavanaugh & Neil Gorsuch][19] and saying: "This is no longer the political party my Dad, Angelo, taught and encouraged me to participate and join, a party for the working man, projecting its beliefs in a respectful and ethical manner." However, he does not approve of Donald Trump.[20] He has criticized the conspiracy theory stating that COVID-19 is a hoax, and has denounced claims that Donald Trump won the 2020 United States presidential election.[21]
Cicconetti has five children.[22]