Crime & Safety
County Law Library Director Charged with Theft
Bruce Piscadlo, 62, is the second person charged after county Controller Stewart J. Greenleaf Jr. released an audit showing $30,000 in misused taxpayer funds.

Original reporting by Brittany Tressler
The former director of the Law Library of Montgomery County is facing theft and related chargesΒ after allegedly using over $4,000 in taxpayer dollars to purchase items for himself and his library staff, according to Montgomery County District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman.
An investigation by the Montgomery County Detective Bureau confirmed that over the past three years, Piscadlo, who retired from his position in December, used tax-payer dollars to purchase 50 items, including computers, laptops, printers and other electronic equipment for himself of his staff, amounting to $4,830.94, according to Ferman.
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In August, the Montgomery County Detectives found a HP Touchscreen All-in-One Computer, a HP Office Jet Printer and a Monster brand Digital Power Center at the Piscadlo's house, all of which were allegedly purchased from Staples using library funds.
The arrestΒ comes just two months after law library bookkeeper Barbara Melnyk was chargedΒ with theft after allegedly purchasing personal items, including her daughterβs college textbooks and a dorm room refrigerator, with library funds, Ferman said.
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Greenleaf said that a combination of βweak oversight and non-existent financial controlsβ enabled the misappropriation of roughly $30,000 to occur while the law library was a βcomponent unitβ of the county, which received county funding but was overseen by the independent Law Library Committee.
Between 2010 and 2012, the law library was allocated more than $2 million in taxpayer funds.
On January 1, the library became a department of the county, which subjected it to a county audit.
Piscadlo was arraigned by Magisterial District Judge Margaret Hunsicker, who set bail at $20,000 unsecured.
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