An Albert Lea woman pleaded not guilty Thursday to taking money from accounts of at least a half dozen people with disabilities at a local care provider and spending the dollars on marijuana and personal goods.
Stephanie Lynn Behrends, 28, was charged in Freeborn County
District Court with financial exploitation of a vulnerable adult and
with check forgery. Both are felonies. She gave her plea before Judge
Steven Schwab.
A jury trial has been scheduled for July 14, though her next court appearance comes in mid-March.
Behrends was a program coordinator at REM Woodvale in Albert
Lea at the time of the alleged misuse in 2011 and 2012. The facility
houses people with intellectual and physical disabilities.
Court documents state a program coordinator is in charge of
managing and keeping records of the residents’ finances. There was
reportedly more than $4,000 in missing and unaccounted for funds under
Behrends’ control.
The criminal complaint states staff at REM Woodvale began to
suspect Behrends was stealing funds from residents in the fall of 2011
when conducting monthly financial audits. There were numerous missing
receipts.
The complaint says administrators began reviewing the
financial records more in depth in May 2012 after a weekend staff member
discovered that all of the residents’ checkbooks, savings books,
ledgers and cash pouches were missing from a locked cupboard in an
apartment Behrends was assigned. The documents were in Behrends’ office.
Court records state upon further review administrators found
that Behrends had not made any entries in the residents’ ledgers since
several months prior and that the dates recorded for bank deposits and
withdrawals were often inconsistent with bank records.
Three residents had received overdraft notices, and Behrends
had reportedly written out numerous checks for cash, the court files
allege.
Administrators also found inconsistencies in some of the
purchases reported. For example, a Walmart receipt was submitted for one
resident for about $140. The receipt indicated purchases of tank tops,
crop tops, polo shirts and capri pants, though the resident wore only
sweatshirts and sweatpants, state the court files.
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It doesn't look good for her, especially if she spent the money on drugs.
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