An employee of the Mark Twain House and Museum in West Hartford, Conn., has admitted in court to embezzling $1 million from the organization that maintains the author’s historic home. The Mark Twain House, like the homes of some of America’s other best-known writers, has faced financial difficulties. Most, however, were not systematically plundered. Report from LA Times Jacket Copy.
Longtime (and now former) staffer Donna Gregory regularly raided the organization’s coffers for eight years; she pleaded guilty to charges of wire fraud and filing a false tax return, Reuters reports.
According to court documents, Gregory submitted false information over the Internet to the Mark Twain House payroll vendor between 2002 and 2010. The misinformation allowed additional pay to which she was not entitled to be deposited into her bank account, classified as payroll advances.
She then adjusted the ledgers to cover up the advances by reclassifying the amounts as utilities, maintenance and similar items. She also falsified the Mark Twain House’s bank statements to hide the advances, authorities said. Gregory used the Mark Twain House’s check-writing system to write checks payable to herself and forged her supervisor’s signatures on those checks, authorities said.
A shame… the magnificent
A shame… the magnificent Twain house already had enough financial problems even without the embezzlement.
Two quick factual corrections: The thief’s last name is Gregor, not Gregory; and the house is in Hartford, not West Hartford. (The LA Times article has corrected the latter error and half-corrected the former, at this point.)