CLEVELAND,
Ohio -- A Parma Heights home health aide who admitted to stealing
hundreds of thousands of dollars from elderly and developmentally
disabled people to fuel a burgeoning drug addiction was sentenced
Tuesday to two years in prison.
Lisa Dotson, 40, was also ordered to repay more than $250,000 total to six different victims she scammed over a period of six years.
Common
Pleas Court Judge Shannon Gallagher imposed the sentence after several
family members of those that Dotson scammed told the judge that Dotson
had hurt them, but they still loved her and forgave her.
“That
tells me you’re not a bad person,” Gallagher said to Dotson. “You made
bad decision after bad decision after bad decision, and you let your
addiction take over.”
Dotson also agreed as part of her plea bargain to testify against her niece, Latasha Wisniewski, who was convicted and sentenced last month to three years in prison.
Dotson
took the stand at Wisniewksi’s August trial and detailed the pair’s
scheme to fleece Charles Bauer, an octogenarian Korean War veteran and
widower, out of his life’s savings. Wisniewski, 37, stole hundreds of
thousands of dollars from Bauer after she feigned a sexual interest in
him and asked him to pay for her breast implants, prosecutors said.
Gallagher
credited Dotson for helping prosecutors build the case against
Wisniewski, who maintained her innocence at her October sentencing and
plans to appeal her conviction.
Dotson
became close with several of the families of her patients, and
exploited that trust to access and pilfer the financial accounts of her
patients, prosecutors said. She routinely wrote herself inflated checks
for the work she performed and took out short-term, high-interest loans
in the name of a 79-year-old woman who was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s
disease, court records say.
Dotson
deceived a man with disabilities of his Supplemental Security Income by
keeping his government-issued benefits card from him, withdrawing all
of the monthly benefits - approximately $740 - from ATMs at the
beginning of each month and lying to the victim that the benefits had
been cut, the indictment says.
Bank
records and other evidence showed that Dotson gambled at casinos and
bought scratch-off lottery tickets on the days that she withdrew the
man’s money.
Full Article & Source:
Parma Heights home health aide who stole more than $250K from people in her care gets prison sentence
No comments:
Post a Comment