The Centre County district attorney who was accused of forging a judge's signature has sued several attorneys and county officials involved in what she alleges was a “power play” against her.

District Attorney Stacy Parks Miller filed a lawsuit Aug. 28 against the Centre County Board of Commissioners, four attorneys, a paralegal, the county solicitor, the county administrator, the county's three commissioners—two of them individually and all in their official capacity—and the judge whose signature Parks Miller was accused of forging. Parks Miller is alleging defamation, injurious falsehood, malicious prosecution, intentional infliction of emotional distress, conspiracy, abuse of process and negligence.

Parks Miller had been accused of forging Centre County Court of Common Pleas Judge Pamela Ruest's signature, but, in late July, state Attorney General Kathleen Kane said there was not enough evidence to support charges against Parks Miller, and the signature had been Ruest's. A grand jury had investigated Parks Miller on allegations related to forgery, tampering with records or identification, and theft of services.