Melinda R. Bixler |
The owner of two West Manchester
Township elder-care companies — one a nonprofit — spent money earmarked
for indigent elderly people to buy herself a home, put her son through
drug rehab and give to family members, West Manchester Township Police
said.
Melinda R. Bixler bought a new
Lexus and took her three children and boyfriend on "very nice vacations"
to Australia and the Caribbean, according to charging documents.
She
created two businesses, both located at 4070 W. Market St., police
said — Elder Healthcare Solutions and the nonprofit Adult Care
Advocates.
The purpose of the nonprofit was to
provide financial assistance to clients in need, such as helping clients
with rent money after a lengthy hospital stay, police said, while Elder
Healthcare Solutions provided power-of-attorney services for people
unable to manage their own financial affairs.
Seven felonies: Bixler, 47, of the
1600 block of South Wyndham Drive in Spring Garden Township, remains
free on $200,000 bail, charged with seven first-degree felonies — three
corrupt organization offenses, theft by deception, theft by failure to
make required disposition of funds, conspiracy to commit theft and
receiving stolen property, according to court records.
Charging
documents state she bought her current home for $685,000 and used money
she embezzled to do so. The 6,500-square-foot home has five bedrooms
and 4½ bathrooms, according to Zillow.com.
Bixler, with the help of her 22-year old son, Zachary
Bixler, moved money that was bequeathed to Adult Care Advocates to Elder
Healthcare's bank account, to her own private bank accounts and
co-mingled the money with her son's bank accounts, charging documents
allege.
"In fact, the activity was so suspicious on
(one) account that (M&T Bank's) Financial Investigation Unit
conducted their own investigation into the matter," documents state.
When Zachary Bixler purportedly needed to go to drug
rehab, Melinda Bixler allegedly told an employee it was going to cost
$14,000, according to documents, which indicated she paid for his rehab
stay.
Utilities shut off?
Meanwhile, Elder Healthcare Solutions began to struggle financially,
documents state — employees' paychecks were bouncing, utilities at the
business office were being turned off and taxes weren't being paid,
documents state.
Melinda Bixler's credit cards were being refused when she would try to pay for lunches, police allege.
Zachary
Bixler remains free on $50,000 unsecured bail, charged with the
felonies of being part of a corrupt organization, receiving stolen
property and conspiracy to commit theft.
Defense attorney Stephen McDonald, who represents Zachary Bixler, said he had no immediate comment on Monday, Jan. 27.
York County detectives assisted West Manchester Township Police with the investigation.
Full Article & Source:
Police: She bought new home, car, went on 'nice vacations.' Meanwhile, employee checks bounced, taxes weren't paid and utilities were cut
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