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Brown
gets 33 months for embezzlement Greg Brown, former
Deschutes County Sheriff, will serve 33 months in a minimum security federal
prison for embezzling more than $575,000 from the Deschutes County Sheriff's
Office and the Sisters-Camp Sherman Rural Fire Protection District.
Brown was sentenced in federal
court in Eugene on Tuesday, March 11. His sentence begins 45 days from
that date. He will also face three years of post-prison supervision.
Brown paid restitution to
both the county and the fire district. The fire district accepted $390,378.16
as restitution. Brown embezzled $171,189.34 from the sheriff's office.
Fire district board member
Dave Elliott said that the board has not made any decisions on how the
restored funds will be used. According to Elliott, the funds probably
won't be tapped in this budget cycle, although the district could do so
through a supplemental budget.
"There's a lot of projects
coming up," Elliott said, noting that the district has purchased property
to expand its facilities in downtown Sisters.
"That could be one use (of
the restored funds)," Elliott said.
Brown's embezzlement at the
fire district was significant and ongoing. He was the budget officer for
the district and the board allowed him broad discretion to handle financial
matters -- both because he was very good at it and because the board trusted
him.
Board President Stephen Spear
said after Brown's guilty plea that the board and district personnel trusted
Brown completely for "who and what we all thought he stood for" as a public
servant and police officer.
The revelation of Brown's
crimes left those personnel with a deep sense of personal betrayal.
According to the U.S. Attorney,
Brown admitted that he embezzled from four separate fire district bank
accounts.
He deposited funds in Brown's
Sabbatical Air account at Oregon Telco Credit Union and into several personal
accounts.
Brown covered his tracks by
writing checks to entities that would not appear suspicious to the RFPD
Board, the U.S. Attorney noted. Sometimes, he falsified the payee.
Brown apologized for his actions
during the sentencing hearing.
"It was a real short apology,"
Elliott said.
"He didn't make eye contact
with any of the people who were there."
Elliott, for one, was unswayed.
"I just didn't take solace
in his apology," Elliott said. "It was disingenuous as far as I'm concerned."
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