First off, I have no contact with this child unfortunately. It was a bad situation from the start and I was basically driven out of her life //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/frown.gif.a3531fa0534503350665a1e957861287.gif
with that said, my little girl's stank azz maternal grandmother was caught stealing $49,000 from the church she was a financial something-or-other for... I call it karma //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif I feel really bad for the church but with all the shit that they put me through, I'm glad she skipped out on her sentencing and now possibly faces up to 3 years in jail //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif
horray for karma!
http://kennebecjournal.mainetoday.com/news/local/4981453.html
AUGUSTA -- A woman who pleaded guilty to stealing $49,900 from the funds of a Gardiner church failed to turn up at her sentencing hearing Friday morning and a judge issued a warrant for her arrest.
Cathy E. Doyle, 50, of Chelsea was to be sentenced in Kennebec County Superior Court. Her attorney, James Billings, told Justice Joseph Jabar in the brief hearing that Doyle had sent an e-mail saying she was hospitalized in Massachusetts.
She had pleaded guilty on Feb. 26 to theft of services, and the sentencing was postponed to allow her to arrange to pay restitution.
However, none of the $49,900 ordered as restitution has been repaid.
Doyle was a part-time financial aid administrator at Christ Episcopal Church in Gardiner.
The state claimed she took the money between April 13, 2005, and Sept. 7, 2006.
"She has medical conditions that make it impossible for her to be in Maine," Billings said.
Doyle sued in Kennebec County Superior Court in November 2000, saying that her employer, the state Department of Human Services, failed to accommodate her medical needs when she took a promotion. Doyle, who had been a state worker for 25 years, lost that claim.
Doyle has a "J-pouch" to collect bodily waste since she has no large intestine. Billings said that pouch burst last month and she required emergency surgery.
He also said she had made arrangements to refinance her home to repay some of the restitution, and he was hoping to receive that money shortly and forward it to the district attorney's office.
"What everyone is concerned about is that the church get repaid," Billings said.
If Doyle had paid a substantial portion of the restitution by the sentencing date, the state and Billings had told the judge they would jointly recommend a sentence of three years in jail, with all but 45 days suspended and was for her to be agreed to recommend a sentence was supposed to pay a substantial amount of money.
"The warrant has $40,000 cash bail," Billings said. "That's to make sure the money will go to the church."
Billings said Doyle has been caring for a daughter who had a kidney transplant several years ago and a granddaughter.
Billings said he was hoping to get documentation from the doctors treating Doyle so he could present it to the judge.
with that said, my little girl's stank azz maternal grandmother was caught stealing $49,000 from the church she was a financial something-or-other for... I call it karma //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif I feel really bad for the church but with all the shit that they put me through, I'm glad she skipped out on her sentencing and now possibly faces up to 3 years in jail //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif
horray for karma!
http://kennebecjournal.mainetoday.com/news/local/4981453.html
AUGUSTA -- A woman who pleaded guilty to stealing $49,900 from the funds of a Gardiner church failed to turn up at her sentencing hearing Friday morning and a judge issued a warrant for her arrest.
Cathy E. Doyle, 50, of Chelsea was to be sentenced in Kennebec County Superior Court. Her attorney, James Billings, told Justice Joseph Jabar in the brief hearing that Doyle had sent an e-mail saying she was hospitalized in Massachusetts.
She had pleaded guilty on Feb. 26 to theft of services, and the sentencing was postponed to allow her to arrange to pay restitution.
However, none of the $49,900 ordered as restitution has been repaid.
Doyle was a part-time financial aid administrator at Christ Episcopal Church in Gardiner.
The state claimed she took the money between April 13, 2005, and Sept. 7, 2006.
"She has medical conditions that make it impossible for her to be in Maine," Billings said.
Doyle sued in Kennebec County Superior Court in November 2000, saying that her employer, the state Department of Human Services, failed to accommodate her medical needs when she took a promotion. Doyle, who had been a state worker for 25 years, lost that claim.
Doyle has a "J-pouch" to collect bodily waste since she has no large intestine. Billings said that pouch burst last month and she required emergency surgery.
He also said she had made arrangements to refinance her home to repay some of the restitution, and he was hoping to receive that money shortly and forward it to the district attorney's office.
"What everyone is concerned about is that the church get repaid," Billings said.
If Doyle had paid a substantial portion of the restitution by the sentencing date, the state and Billings had told the judge they would jointly recommend a sentence of three years in jail, with all but 45 days suspended and was for her to be agreed to recommend a sentence was supposed to pay a substantial amount of money.
"The warrant has $40,000 cash bail," Billings said. "That's to make sure the money will go to the church."
Billings said Doyle has been caring for a daughter who had a kidney transplant several years ago and a granddaughter.
Billings said he was hoping to get documentation from the doctors treating Doyle so he could present it to the judge.
