[nfbmi-talk] our one stop scandel continues

Terry D. Eagle terrydeagle at yahoo.com
Fri Dec 6 17:29:07 UTC 2013


Judge Goldsmith certainly got that criminal sentence decision WRONG!  Judge
Goldsmith, just what "strong" message does this sentence without prison time
send to the criminal mind?  As Ms. Loving (is that her real name, or is that
her scam name?), enjoys the freedom and comfort of home and home-cooked
meals, in what environment are the client consumers she and her relative,
Ms. Williams, ripped off?  And she had the gall to sue and win $150,000 for
job loss, which she need not repay?  That is greed with reward at its
greatest.  Yet it sends a strong message to the criminal mind, according to
Judge Goldsmith?  I suppose she was too pretty to go to jail, as in other
convicted criminal cases?

If the feds want more cases of criminal greed, complete with fraudulent
misuse of federal taxpayer funds, including family relatives and intimate
partners, I can provide some names of persons allegedly entrusted with the
proper use of such money, right here within the view of our state Capitol. 

-----Original Message-----
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Sent: Thursday, December 05, 2013 8:04 AM
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Subject: [nfbmi-talk] our one stop scandel continues

Former Career Alliance head spared prison time in embezzlement case

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Gary Ridley | gridley at mlive.com

By

Gary Ridley | gridley at mlive.com

Follow on Twitter

 

on December 03, 2013 at 5:05 PM, updated December 04, 2013 at 6:33 AM

 

Loving,Pamela.JPGPamela LovingMLive.com file photo

 

FLINT, MI -- A federal judge spared prison time for the former head of
Career Alliance after she pleaded guilty to embezzling federal funds from
the career

service agency.

 

Pamela Loving was ordered Tuesday, Dec. 3, to pay more than $586,000 in
restitution and serve five years of probation -- including one year of house
arrest

-- by Flint U.S. District Judge Mark A. Goldsmith.

 

Loving, 70, pleaded guilty in June to embezzling federal funds from the
career services agency. Loving, the former president and chief executive
officer

of Career Alliance, now known as Genesee/Shiawassee Michigan Works, admitted
to taking roughly $77,000 from the organization for her personal benefit and

to pay for training sessions for people who did not work for Career
Alliance.

 

However, federal authorities claimed that Loving inappropriately distributed
funding to programs not authorized by the Department of Labor, forcing
Career

Alliance to repay more than $500,000 to the state.

 

Loving's attorney, Richard Morgan, said that his client is currently going
through a bankruptcy and is unemployed. He declined to elaborate on how
Loving

planned to pay back the restitution.

 

"She's going to pay what the court ordered her to pay," Morgan said.

 

Morgan argued during the hearing that Loving

should be spared prison time

because only roughly $13,000 was used for Loving's personal benefit.
However, Goldsmith said Loving also benefited by using her position with
Career Alliance

to advance socially in the Flint community.

 

"There was a significant amount of funding that ended up benefiting (Loving)
either in a monetary way or a non-monetary way," Goldsmith said.

 

Goldsmith declined to sentence Loving to prison, despite sentencing
guidelines that called for 10-16 months of incarceration. However, Goldsmith
said his

sentence sends a strong signal that this type of crime would not be
tolerated by the court.

 

"The offense was a serious one and the law that she violated does need to be
respected and vindicated," Goldsmith said.

 

The federal statute Loving pleaded guilty to violating allowed for a maximum
of two years in prison.

 

Goldsmith also declined to force Loving to pay restitution for a judgment
she received after suing the agency despite a letter from current
Genesee/Shiawassee

Michigan Works CEO Craig Coney asking for the funds.

 

Flint Journal records show Loving was placed on unpaid administrative leave
from her position at Career Alliance in 2007 and never returned. She won a

$154,000 judgment

in 2008 against Career Alliance because she claimed her contract had been
effectively terminated.

 

Goldsmith said he would not allow the restitution because he did not believe
the judgment was attributed to her criminal conduct.

 

Morgan argued that attorney's for Career Alliance had the chance to
challenge the payment to his client and that it would be inappropriate now
for the judge

to order Loving to pay back the judgment.

 

"Hindsight is always 20/20," Morgan said of the lawsuit, adding that his
client has already spent all of the money.

 

County, state and federal

investigators

reported chronic mismanagement and improper spending at Career Alliance
after a series of Flint Journal stories in 2007 detailed problems at the
organization.

 

Career Alliance serves as a job-training agency for Genesee and Shiawassee
counties as well as the city of Flint and is responsible for millions of
dollars

for employment programs.

 

Last month, former Flint school board member, Helen Williams was sentenced
to two years probation after she pleaded guilty to embezzling funds from
Career

Alliance.

 

Williams served as executive director of Flint Family Road, an organization
started with the goal of reducing infant deaths by better preparing parents

to be mothers and fathers, according to Flint Journal files.

 

She admitted in court to falsifying invoices to get money from Career
Alliance contractors for services she never provided. Williams admitted in
court to

embezzling more than $88,000.

 

Williams served on the Flint school board for seven years, before resigning
in 2001.

 

In a 2008 letter questioning spending at Career Alliance, the Michigan
Department of Labor and Economic Growth said it had been informed Helen
Williams

was a cousin of Loving and that Family Road was given rent-free space in
Career Alliance's Ruether Center.

 

Williams was sentenced Oct. 17 by Flint U.S. District Judge Mark A.
Goldsmith to also pay more than $240,000 in restitution.

 

QB Pittman, Career Alliance's former chief Financial officer,

was sentenced

Oct. 24 in U.S. District Court to one year probation ordered to pay
$91,321.46 in restitution after Pittman pleaded guilty to misapplication of
Workforce

Investment Act funding.

 

Pittman said in court that he did not directly benefit from the money taken,
but also admitted he did nothing to stop it.

 

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