PHILADELPHIA—Hugh C. Clark, 65, and Ina
Walker, 59, both of Philadelphia, were sentenced today for their respective
roles in a scheme to defraud the Philadelphia-based New Media Technology
Charter School (New Media) and the Wilmington Savings Fund Society. Clark, who
pleaded guilty in April to conspiracy, wire fraud, bank fraud, and theft from a
federally funded program, was sentenced to 24 months’ imprisonment and five
year supervised release. Walker, who pleaded guilty in January, was sentenced
to six months’ imprisonment and five years’ supervised release to include 1,00
hours of community service. U.S. District Court Judge Jan E. DuBois also
ordered the defendants to pay restitution in the amount of $861,000 and a
special assessment of $2,800.
Clark was a founder of New Media in 2004
and served as president of the New Media board of directors. Walker was a
founder and served as CEO. Both were forced to resign effective December 31,
2009. The superseding indictment charged Clark and Walker with improperly using
approximately $522,000 in New Media funds to (a) pay expenses at a small
private school, Lotus Academy; (b) advance Clark and Walker’s personal business
ventures, including the Black Olive health food store and the Black Olive
restaurant; (c) benefit Tekhen, a web design and Internet access company that
Clark owned and controlled; and (d) pay their own personal expenses. At least
$309,000 was fraudulently diverted from New Media to Lotus Academy, often
disguised as prepaid rent or bogus security deposits. Once the funds were
deposited into Lotus Academy bank accounts, the defendants spent the money on
the expenses of their private school and on their personal and business
ventures.
As a result of the defendants’ improper
and fraudulent use of funds, New Media failed to meet its expenses, such as
employee payroll checks, monthly employee withholdings and quarterly employer
contributions to the Pennsylvania School Employees Retirement System, payments
to the school’s athletic coaches and payments to a textbook vendor.
Clark, without notice to or approval
from the New Media Board of Directors, entered New Media into a written contact
to purchase a school property for the sole purpose of benefitting Lotus
Academy. Clark and Walker used $15,000 of New Media’s funds as part of the
$45,000 deposit for purchase of the school property. When the sale did not
close and the $45,000 deposit was returned to Lotus Academy, Clark and Walker
did not return the $15,000 to New Media. Rather, Clark and Walker caused the entire
$45,000 to be spent in various ways, including for Lotus Academy expenses (rent
and payroll), payments to the Black Olive business ventures, and a cash deposit
into defendant Walker’s personal bank account to pay Walker’s personal bills.
Clark and Walker also defrauded
Wilmington Savings Fund Society (WSFS) by providing false documents to obtain a
$357,500 loan from the bank in 2006. The loan, obtained in Walker’s name, was
used to buy a commercial property at 22-24 E. Mount Airy Avenue, which housed
the Black Olive restaurant. Walker ultimately defaulted on $339,000 of the
debt.
The case was investigated by the United
States Department of Education Office of Inspector General and the Federal
Bureau of Investigation. The School District of Philadelphia’s Office of
Inspector General provided assistance in the investigation. It was prosecuted
by Assistant United States Attorney Joan E. Burnes.
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