I sa that on the news last night.

WTF are people thinking when they do something like this? 


--
Tim Heald
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
703-300-3911
-----Original Message-----
From: Larry C. Lyons [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Saturday, March 11, 2006 10:34 AM
To: CF-Community
Subject: FW: Former Top Bush Aide Accused of Md. Thefts

>From this morning's Washington Post:
http://www.antiwrap.com/?933

Former Top Bush Aide Accused of Md. Thefts Refund Scam Netted $5,000, Police
Say

By Ernesto LondoƱo and Michael A. Fletcher Washington Post Staff Writers
Saturday, March 11, 2006; A01

Claude A. Allen, who resigned last month as President Bush's top domestic
policy adviser, was arrested this week in Montgomery County for allegedly
swindling Target and Hecht's stores out of more than $5,000 in a refund
scheme, police said.

Allen, 45, of Gaithersburg, has been released on his own recognizance and is
awaiting trial on two charges, felony theft scheme and theft over $500, said
Lt. Eric Burnett, a police spokesman. Each charge is punishable by up to 15
years in prison.

Allen could not be reached for comment last night.

His attorney, Mallon Snyder, said last night that his client denies
wrongdoing. The lawyer disputed the police account of Allen's actions.
"It's his reputation. Obviously, he's very concerned about it," Snyder said.

Snyder said he feels confident that Allen will be able to prove that the
incidents were "a series of misunderstandings."

Allen, a former deputy secretary in the Department of Health and Human
Services, was nominated in 2003 to a federal appeals court seat. He was
appointed the president's top domestic policy adviser last year at the start
of Bush's second term. That made him the highest-ranking African American on
the White House staff.

Working out of a small office on the second floor of the West Wing, Allen
shaped administration policy on such issues as health care, space
exploration, housing and education.

He came to the attention of Montgomery police after a manager at a
Gaithersburg Target store called the department about an incident Jan.
2. Montgomery detectives were able to document other alleged crimes from
Oct. 29 to Jan. 2, some of which were captured on camera, Burnett said.

Allen resigned from the White House on Feb. 9, saying he wanted to spend
more time with his family

In a statement that day, Bush said: "Claude is a good and compassionate man,
and he has my deep respect and gratitude. I thank him for his many years of
principled and dedicated service to our country."

Burnett said Montgomery police contacted the White House to verify Allen's
identity after the Jan. 2 incident. He said that was the extent of their
communication with the administration. He said he could not immediately
determine the date of that contact, or whether police informed the White
House that Allen had been charged Jan. 2 and was still under investigation.

White House spokesman Scott McClellan said last night that if the allegation
is true, "no one would be more disappointed, shocked and outraged" than the
president. McClellan said Allen had told White House Chief of Staff Andrew
H. Card Jr. and White House counsel Harriet Miers that the matter was a
misunderstanding.

This is what police said happened Jan. 2:

Employees at the Target store at 25 Grand Corner Ave. in Gaithersburg
spotted Allen putting merchandise in a shopping bag. He then walked over to
the guest services desk, produced a receipt and received a refund for the
items.

After getting the refund, Allen left the store without paying for additional
merchandise in his shopping cart.

A store employee stopped him, and police were called to the store.
Officers issued a citation charging him with theft under $500 but did not
arrest him. Court records show prosecutors dropped the misdemeanor charge,
which is not unusual in cases in which detectives are considering filing
more serious charges.

Detectives from the county's retail crime unit soon learned that the
incident was not an isolated event, Burnett said.

He said investigators were able to document 25 fraudulent refunds for items
including a Bose home theater system, stereo equipment, clothes, a photo
printer and items worth as little as $2.50.

Allen would purchase an item, take it to his car, return to the store,
select the same item, take it to the counter and get a refund based on the
receipt for the merchandise in his car, Burnett said. "He would get the
money back or the credit" on his credit cards.

Allen's arrest was first reported yesterday afternoon by the online magazine
Slate.

At the time of his resignation, Allen denied reports that he was leaving to
protest military guidelines that required chaplains to perform only
nondenominational services.

As Bush's top domestic policy aide, he frequently briefed the president and
traveled with him on Air Force One, and he sat in first lady Laura Bush's
box during the president's State of the Union address Jan. 31. Two days,
later he traveled with the president to Minnesota, briefing reporters about
Bush's education and alternative energy proposals.

At the Department of Health and Human Services, where he became a strong
advocate for abstinence-only AIDS prevention programs, Allen focused on
homeless issues and racial health disparities.

Democrats in Congress blocked his nomination to the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the 4th Circuit in 2003, citing his relative lack of legal experience.
The court, based in Richmond, covers Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina and
South Carolina.

Allen, a native of Philadelphia, spent much of his childhood in a
working-class section of Northwest Washington, attending Archbishop Carroll
High School. He later attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill and Duke Law School.

Allen is a self-described born-again Christian who got his start in politics
working for Jesse Helms (R), the conservative former North Carolina senator.

Allen stirred controversy as Helms's campaign spokesman in 1984 by telling a
reporter that then-Gov. James B. Hunt Jr. -- Helms's opponent -- was
politically vulnerable because of his links to the "queers." He later
explained that he used the word not to denigrate anyone but as a synonym for
"odd and unusual."

Before that, Allen worked for the Virginia state attorney general's office
and as state health and human resources secretary. In that job, he earned a
reputation as a staunch conservative; once he kept Medicaid funds from an
impoverished rape victim who wanted an abortion.

Staff writer Martin Weil contributed to this report.

(c) 2006 The Washington Post Company


--
Your representative owes you, not his industry only, but his judgment; and
he betrays instead of serving you if he sacrifices it to your opinion.

Edmond Burke



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Message: http://www.houseoffusion.com/lists.cfm/link=i:5:199607
Archives: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/threads.cfm/5
Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/lists.cfm/link=s:5
Unsubscribe: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=11502.10531.5
Donations & Support: http://www.houseoffusion.com/tiny.cfm/54

Reply via email to