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Ex-United Way officer guilty of embezzling©Associated PressFebruary 7, 2003 GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. -- A former United Way executive pleaded guilty Thursday to stealing nearly $1.9-million to buy expensive show horses in what is believed to be the biggest embezzlement case in the agency's history. Jacquelyn Allen-MacGregor worked in the Capital Area United Way in East Lansing for 20 years before resigning as vice president for finance in November. Prosecutors said she stole the money over seven years, beginning in 1996, and used it to fund her quarter horse business. In pleading guilty to federal counts of check forging and engaging in an illegal financial transaction, Allen-MacGregor said she once paid $45,000 for a horse. Allen-MacGregor, 46, faces up to 10 years in prison on each count at sentencing in May. She agreed to let the United Way seize and sell her assets in an effort to recoup the money. The plea comes eight years after William Aramony, a former chief of the national charity, was convicted of defrauding United Way out of $600,000 to support a lavish lifestyle for himself and his girlfriends. Under public scrutiny of charitable organizations after the Sept. 11 attacks, United Way of America last month instituted some additional checks and balances in its accounting procedures, said Brian A. Gallagher, president and chief executive officer of the organization in Alexandria, Va. Allen-MacGregor said she stole the money by writing checks to herself on the Capital Area United Way account and forging the names of required co-signers. When the bank returned the canceled checks to the agency, she destroyed them. The chapter now uses an accounting firm to reconcile bank statements. Allen-MacGregor also said she deposited the money into two accounts she shared with her husband, one personal and one for the horse business, Celebration Quarter Horses. She said her husband knew nothing about the transactions because she handled the family's finances. Besides the possibility of prison time, she faces a maximum fine of $250,000 and three years of supervised release on each count. © 2006 • All Rights Reserved • Tampa Bay Times
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From the Times wire desk
From the AP |
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