Principal found guilty of selling meth - at school.
People sometimes look at me with a blank stare when I try to explain to them that anyone can become addicted to meth. People from all walks of life are trying this “poor man’s coke” and even if they weren’t poor to begin with, they will be once they are using habitually. Meth’s grip on lives is non-subjective and regardless of what you do for a living or who looks up to you, if you play you will pay.
Pa. principal sentenced to prison for selling meth from office
By MICHAEL RUBINKAM
A former middle school principal who pleaded guilty to selling crystal methamphetamine from his office was sentenced Thursday to two to four years in state prison.
John Acerra, 50, apologized to students, teachers and parents at Nitschmann Middle School in Bethlehem, where he was arrested in February after he tried to sell meth to an informant.
“I take full responsibility for my actions,” Acerra said Thursday in Lehigh County Court, still looking very much like a principal in blue blazer, tan pants and paisley tie. “I have a disease called addiction, but I don’t blame my wrongdoing on my disease or society. I apologize for betraying the trust which I was granted.”
Acerra told the judge that he has been attending Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous meetings.
Acerra pleaded guilty in August to two counts of felony delivery of methamphetamine and one count of felony possession with intent to deliver.
Officials have said there was no indication Acerra sold the drug to students.
Judge William Platt marveled that Acerra had let his addiction progress to the point where he would try to sell drugs at the school. He said Acerra had “wiped out all the good he could have ever done in his entire educational career. That day wiped it out.”
He continued: “You have a price to pay, and that price you pay may be an educational experience for all of your students as well.”
Police began surveilling Acerra in early February after an informant told them the principal was using and distributing the highly addictive drug. After watching him sell a small amount of meth to a customer in a store parking lot, police arranged for an informant to wear a wire and go to Acerra’s office to buy $200 worth of meth.
Acerra did not have enough meth to sell to the informant, and he and the informant arranged to meet later that night to complete the buy.
After the informant left the building, police entered Acerra’s office and found him sitting at his desk with a bag of meth next to a glass tube with meth residue and burn marks on it, according to court documents. Also on the desk was the marked money the informant used to purchase the drug.
Acerra faced more prison time because he sold the drug within 1,000 feet of a school.
“Parents send their children to school and they believe in the teachers and principals to do the right thing,” said Steve Luksa, chief deputy district attorney. “This defendant breached that trust.”
The former principal could have made bail, but chose to stay in prison and get clean, according to his attorney, George Heitczman.
Acerra became Nitschmann’s principal in 2000 and was paid more than $80,000 a year. Before that, he was the school’s director of instruction and curriculum. He joined the district as a teacher in 1979.
Meth’s grip knows no boundaries. Thankfully he had the sense to stay in jail and get clean. Many times it takes desperate measures to get an addict to break the habit.
Popularity: 5% [?]
Related posts:
Did you enjoy this post? Why not leave a comment below and continue the conversation, or subscribe to my feed and get articles like this delivered automatically each day to your feed reader. If you don't have a feed reader, you can always have these articles delivered to your email inbox every day. Click here to sign up.





Add New Comment
Viewing 1 Comment
Thanks. Your comment is awaiting approval by a moderator.
Do you already have an account? Log in and claim this comment.
Do you already have an account? Log in and claim this comment.
Add New Comment