LETTER |
The U.S. Attorney, in a rare letter of vindication, said he will not bring formal charges against Kevin Rogers, the corrections officer who was being investigated for improperly spending union funds.
Rogers was the vice president of
the now defunct Sheriff’s Employees Association of Rensselaer County. He came
under investigation for spending union dues on dinners at expensive
restaurants, strip clubs, charitable organizations he fancied and political campaigns
of candidates he favored.
Sheriff Jack Mahar placed Rogers
on suspension with full pay – about $75,000 - four years ago while the federal
government investigated. Now that the investigation is closed, it’s unclear if
Rogers will go back to work for his paycheck. Mahar has, in the past, said
Rogers will never work at the jail again.
The union’s president at the time,
Mark Piche, was also investigated. He pleaded guilty to tax evasion in an
unrelated matter involving the Red Front Restaurant, which is owned by his
family, and resigned his post as a corrections officer. As was reported
earlier, part of that deal was his agreeing to testify against Rogers should
the case ever made it to trial.
ROGERS |
U.S. Attorney for the Northern
District Richard S. Hartunian, in the Dec. 5 letter to Rogers’s attorney Gaspar M.
Castillo, said he would hand information over to the state Attorney General, but
the statute of limitations is rapidly approaching. And, it’s widely believed,
that if the federal government couldn’t find any crime after four years of
probing, the state government will give it a cursory glance at best.
Sources say that investigators for
the U.S. Attorney’s Office reached out to Rogers on a number of occasions – the
latest being last week – saying they were ready to indict and that it would go
easier on him if he cooperated. Rogers declined to talk and instead called
their bluff.
Rogers never denied spending the
union money in the manner stated above and most, if not all, of the
transactions were recorded as expenditures in the union check book. However,
once the investigation was kicked off, union members complained of not having
access to the records, asked for a criminal investigation and voted to dissolve
the union.
The initial complaint filed by
some union members came after Gary Gordon challenged Mahar for sheriff in 2011.
Personnel at the jail were split on which camp they supported during the
heated, contentious campaign.
MAHAR |
This fall, Rogers joined a handful
of jail employees – civilian and uniformed - who filed a civil suit against
Mahar and Rensselaer County for claims their medical records were accessed in
violation of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPPA.
The county has settled one suit for $20,000.
The U.S. Attorney – or any
investigatory body – rarely sends a letter stating the case is closed and
charges will not be pursued. The only other person to receive such a letter, in
recent memory, was then Cohoes Mayor Bob Signoracci after the FBI concluded its
investigation into a number of alleged financial improprieties without bringing
charges in the mid-1990s.
More information as it becomes
available.