CHARLESTON, W.Va. – United States Attorney Mike Stuart
announced today that a federal jury sitting in Charleston returned unanimous
guilty verdicts following the trial of former Logan County Schools
Superintendent Phyllis Doty, 68, of Logan.
The guilty verdicts came after a four day jury trial before Senior
United States District Judge David A. Faber.
The FBI and the West Virginia Legislature Commission on Special
Investigations conducted the investigation.
“Guilty. Guilty on
all counts,” said United States Attorney Mike Stuart. “We’ve placed an intense priority on public
corruption. Violations of the public
trust by public officials, a position of trusted authority, is a true cancer to
society. Standing in defiance of public
corruption is a fundamental priority for this United States Attorney and the
United States of America. I want to
thank the tireless work of the FBI, the West Virginia Legislature Commission on
Special Investigations and AUSAs Gabe Wohl and Erik Goes and our entire team
for their shared commitment in defiance of public corruption.”
Doty was found guilty of eight felony charges, including
four counts of wire fraud, two counts of theft from a program receiving federal
funds, one count of mail fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft and
faces up to 122 years in prison when she is sentenced on January 30, 2019.
Doty, who retired from Logan County Schools in 2016, stole
over $12,000 in electronic devices purchased by the Logan County Board of
Education and used public funds to decorate and supply her son's August 2015
wedding. The scheme began in 2011 when the Logan County Board of Education
regularly purchased Apple iPods and iPads for Logan County Schools staff. The jury found that between 2011 and 2015,
Doty stole at least 20 of these devices, and either sold them on eBay for
profit, or gave them to family members as gifts. Doty directed the purchase of
the devices or purchased them herself, and then sold them online or gave them
away to her family.
Doty’s scheme included ordering over $6,500 in wedding
supplies with Logan County Board of Education money. These items included bread
baskets, easels, drink dispensers, columns, decorative urns and a
colonnade. Doty claimed that these items
were requested by Logan County teachers, however, the teachers knew nothing of
these orders and the items mostly remained in boxes until they were used for
the wedding. Evidence at trial showed
that Doty gave some of these items away to the wedding planner following the
wedding.
Doty attempted to cover up her scheme once an investigation
into suspicious spending became public by attempting to influence Logan County
teachers of the falsehood that she had permission to take iPods purchased by
the Logan County Board of Education, and then by Doty asking the wedding planner
to return the gifted items to a Logan County school.
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