In 1956, Pennsylvania governor
George M. Leader appointed Cercone to the Allegheny County
Court of Common Pleas. He was reelected in 1957 and 1967. Soon after his appointment, Cercone ordered a
grand jury investigation into the sale of
pornographic magazines, calling them "moral pollution"; this led to a tightening of state
obscenity laws. In 1968, Cercone was elected to the Superior Court of Pennsylvania. In 1979, he arranged for the
American Judicature Society to study the Superior Court, which resulted in a report that the court was significantly overworked. The voters of Pennsylvania approved an
amendment to the
Pennsylvania Constitution increasing the size of the court by eight judges. Cercone left the court upon reaching the
mandatory retirement age of 90. He died of
pneumonia on January 2, 2005. ==See also==