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MMI celebrates new athletic fields
MMI threw out ceremonial first pitches at its new baseball and softball fields on April 13. At the ceremony were, from left: Ruth Ann Schaeffer; Samuel Schaeffer; Elaine Cusat; Anthony Cusat; President Thomas Hood; Caitlin Ferry ’10, who sang the national anthem; Dr. William Shergalis ’58; Miki Shergalis; Athletic Director Bruce Young; and Capital Campaign Chairman Tim Twardzik. See story and additional photos, page 12.
Alumna elected Montour district attorney Rebecca Warren ’84 has a new title: Montour County district attorney.
difference,” Warren said.
She was elected to the position by an overwhelming majority – 78 percent – in November and took office January 3 as the county’s first female district attorney.
In 2006, she lost her father, Robert H. Kenvin, and brother, Robert W. Kenvin, in a car accident caused by another driver.
“I’m honored the electorate thought I was the most qualified,” she said. After earning a bachelor’s degree in political science from Bloomsburg University and her Juris Doctorate from Dickinson Law School, Warren began her legal career with a private firm in Bloomsburg. Within a year, she had made partner. Seven years later, she joined the district attorney’s office in Columbia County as an assistant district attorney and then opened her own practice. “I loved the work in the district attorney’s office. I got a lot of positive feedback from law enforcement and victims and really felt as though I was making a
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pleaded guilty to two counts of homicide. Warren’s crusade for justice for her father and brother, coupled with her enjoyment of her work in the Columbia County District Attorney’s Office, led her to seek the position of Montour County district attorney.
“The perpetrator had Atty. Rebecca Warren ’84 connections and wasn’t going to be charged,” said Warren, who worked tirelessly to convince the Luzerne County District Attorney’s Office to file charges. “I felt this was my mission and what I was supposed to do,” she said.
As district attorney, she handles trial work and court appearances, working to prove a crime occurred and that the person who was charged was the one who committed the crime. She is the only attorney on her staff, which includes a victim witness coordinator, a paralegal, and a county detective. “Montour County is an eighth-class county, meaning it’s one of the smallest in Pennsylvania. Unfortunately, that doesn’t mean we are immune from crime,” said Warren, noting that the county is on track to have a record year of crime. Continued on page 10
After charges were filed, the perpetrator
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