Converted Campaign Funds to her Personal Use
Greenbelt, Maryland – U.S. District Judge Theodore D. Chuang
today sentenced former Maryland State Delegate Tawanna P. Gaines, age 67, of
Berwyn Heights, Maryland, to six months in federal prison, followed by two
months of home detention with electronic monitoring, as part of three years of
supervised release, on a federal wire fraud charge. Gaines converted more than $22,000 in
campaign funds to her personal use.
Judge Chuang also ordered Gaines to pay restitution and to forfeit
$22,565.03, which is the loss resulting from her fraud.
The sentence was announced by United States Attorney for the
District of Maryland Robert K. Hur and Special Agent in Charge Jennifer C.
Boone of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Baltimore Field Office.
“Tawanna Gaines betrayed the public trust by using her
position in the Maryland House of Delegates to enrich herself, at the expense
of her constituents,” said U.S. Attorney Robert K. Hur. “Our elected officials
are entrusted to make decisions in the best interests of the people they
represent. We will pursue and prosecute
those who break that trust and bring them to justice.”
“Public corruption at any level undermines the community’s
faith in their elected officials thus enabling long-term damage to government
institutions,” said FBI Baltimore Special Agent in Charge Jennifer Boone. “The
FBI works diligently to detect fraud and corruption and hold those who violate
the public’s trust accountable. Anyone who believes they have information about
public corruption is asked to contact the FBI at 410-265-8080 or tips.fbi.gov.”
According to her plea agreement, Gaines was a Maryland State
Delegate from December 2001 through October 17, 2019, representing District 22,
which covered portions of Prince George’s County. Over her years in the House of Delegates,
Gaines held many committee assignments, including vice-chair of the
Appropriations Committee and Assistant Majority Leader. The “Friends of Tawanna P. Gaines” (FTPG)
candidate committee was the name of the finance entity for the Gaines campaign
for Maryland State Delegate from June 2002 to the present. FTPG was a regulated state election campaign
committee with a designated bank account.
Separately, Gaines held exclusive control over a PayPal account used to
accept electronic donations to FTPG which was not disclosed in State campaign
finance filings.
Gaines admitted that from at least January 2015 through
April 2018, she defrauded the campaign and its contributors of more than
$22,000. Specifically, Gaines solicited
campaign contributions, falsely representing to contributors that the funds
would be used to facilitate her reelection and maintain her leadership
positions within the Maryland General Assembly.
Gaines accepted donations from campaign contributors into the FTPG
PayPal account, then without authorization and in violation of Maryland
campaign finance laws, utilized campaign funds from the FTPG account for her
personal use. Gaines admitted that she
received campaign contributions and converted them to her own use without
causing the contributions to be identified on reports made to the Maryland
State Board of Elections.
As detailed in her plea agreement, Gaines used the campaign
funds from the FTPG PayPal account to pay for personal expenses, such as fast
food, hair styling, dental work, a cover for the pool at her personal
residence, an Amazon Fire TV stick, Amazon Prime membership, and payments to
Amazon.com. In addition, during the course
of the scheme Gaines withdrew a total of approximately $1,952.75 in cash from
ATM machines and electronically transferred at least $2,061.55 from the FTPG
PayPal account directly to her personal checking account. The total loss as a result of Gaines’ fraud
was at least $22,565.03. As part of her
plea agreement, Gaines is required to forfeit and pay restitution in that
amount.
United States Attorney Robert K. Hur commended the FBI for
its work in the investigation. Mr. Hur
thanked Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas P. Windom, who prosecuted the case.
No comments:
Post a Comment