GREAT FALLS – The former chairman of the Blackfeet Tribe
today admitted charges in an overtime pay scheme in which persons who worked in
the tribe’s Head Start program, including his wife, defrauded the child
assistance program of $174,000, U.S. Attorney Kurt Alme said.
Willie Sharp, 66, of Browning, pleaded guilty to wire fraud.
Sharp faces a maximum 20 years in prison, a $250,000 fine and three years of
supervised release.
U.S. District Judge Brian M. Morris presided. Judge Morris
set sentencing for March 3, 2020 and continued Sharp’s release.
The prosecution said in court records that Sharp authorized
and approved overtime at the Blackfeet Head Start Program knowing that the
overtime claims were false. The falsely claimed overtime pay totaled $174,000 in
federal funds for more than 5,800 hours claimed over a 15-month period. Sharp’s
wife, Denise Sharp, and four other co-defendants have been convicted and
sentenced in the case.
When the fraud was uncovered, two different firms audited
the Blackfeet Head Start program. Both audits questioned the overtime claims,
identifying them as “beyond necessary and reasonable” and lacking any
supporting documentation.
The Blackfeet Tribe did its own internal review, agreed it
could not justify the overtime claims and repaid the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services $250,620.29 for disallowed costs and other expenses.
The investigation has resulted in the indictment and
conviction of Denise Sharp, Theresa Calf Boss Ribs, Patrick Calf Boss Ribs,
Carol Bird and Allen Shane Gross.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Ryan Weldon is prosecuting the case,
which was investigated by the FBI and the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services’ Office of Inspector General.
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