Showing posts with label San Bernardino County Court. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Bernardino County Court. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 09, 2013

Suspected Rialto lunch money embezzler, Judith Oakes, allegedly writes confession.. The Sun By Beau Yarbrough & Joe Nelson

Suspected Rialto lunch money embezzler, Judith Oakes, allegedly writes confession

Oakes 
Oakes 
Rialto >> Rialto police handed their case against a former Rialto Unified accountant accused of embezzling up to $3.1 million in lunch money to the San Bernardino County District Attorney’s office Monday. Among the evidence: a letter, purportedly written by Judith Oakes herself, confessing to the crime.
A copy of the letter, dated Aug. 14, was obtained by this newspaper.
“Last week, as you know by now, I committed a crime and was arrested,” the letter reads in part. “I not only hurt myself, but my family, the district, my friends and the school district employees who know me. There were no other school district employees involved in this crime and my confession to the police was honest and heartfelt.”
Oakes could not be reached for comment for this story. Rialto police said they are investigating the letter and its origins and are also attempting to confirm it was authored by Oakes.
Oakes, 49, was an accountant for the district’s Nutritional Services Department. She was arrested Aug. 7 after twice being caught on camera putting money into her bra, according to a Rialto Police Department search warrant. At the time of her arrest, she had a large quantity of cash on her person and more was found at her San Bernardino home later. She resigned from the district the next day.
The letter-writer claims that Superintendent Harold Cebrun was unconnected to the crime:
“I feel so bad knowing that the papers are using the crime that I committed to damage his reputation. But all of you must stop blaming Dr. Cebrun, let him continue to do his job, work with him, and I will have to face the consequences of my own actions.”
The envelope the letter was sent in reads “to the Board of Education to be read in closed session on 8/14/13,” but the letter did not surface until after Rialto Unified board President Joe Ayala offered a public defense of Cebrun after a closed-session meeting last week:
Cebrun is “an honorable man who has not been convicted of any crime,” Ayala said, reading from a prepared statement on Wednesday. If Cebrun has done anything wrong, “it’s because he fell into a web, (one) that many of us men fall into.”
“Dr. Cebrun was friends with Ms. Oakes, but the friendship is being exaggerated by the RUSD board of education and the press. Dr. Cebrun was not involved in an intimate, romantic relationship with Ms. Oakes,” Rancho Cucamonga-based attorney Willie W. Williams wrote in a letter on behalf of Cebrun.
Oakes allegedly gave the letter to neighbor Mike Ricker, who works as the warehouse supervisor for Rialto Unified.
“Judy did give me a letter in an envelope, a sealed envelope to give to (Deputy Superintendent) Wallace on the 14th,” Ricker said Friday. “I don’t know what the letter said. She just asked me to deliver it to him.”
And that’s just what happened, according to Wallace.
“I never opened it up. It was a sealed envelope,” Wallace said Friday.
Wallace, who along with Cebrun was placed on administrative leave in September, put the letter in an in-box in the superintendent’s office “back in August,” he said.
He and the superintendent weren’t present in the Aug. 14 closed session meeting, Wallace said.
That was the board meeting that became a big mess,” Wallace said. “I never knew if that letter was utilized or not utilized. We were not there.”
According to Ayala, it wasn’t: “No, no,” he said Friday, saying he hadn’t heard of the letter before then. “I’m definitely not aware of that.”
Rialto police Capt. Randy DeAnda declined to say whether Oakes had confessed to police when she was arrested in August.
“Obviously, I can’t comment on anything involving whether Judith Oakes confessed or cooperated with the investigation,” he said.
Williams said Monday that he and Cebrun had seen the so-called Oakes confession letter and that the handwriting appeared to be Oakes’.
“(Cebrun) firmly believes it is her handwriting,” Williams said.
Williams denied his client had anything to do with the letter.
“He had nothing to do with Ms. Oakes writing the letter, directly or indirectly, and just recently became aware of it,” Williams said.
The timing has, however, raised eyebrows with Rialto police.
“It was kind of coincidental that letter came in when other people were getting that letter from Cebrun,” DeAnda said. “If it was a letter authored by her, we want to make sure it’s authentic and not something that’s been contrived.”
The letter is something the District Attorney’s Office may want to take a look at, he said.
The letter’s author expresses contrition on behalf of Oakes:
“Don’t blame others for what I have done as I am extremely sorry for my actions against the district,” the letter allegedly written by Oakes concludes. “I hope that this letter will help you and Dr. Cebrun to come together and give this district and community the leadership it deserves.
“Please forgive me and pray for me as I too will be praying for you.”

ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Beau Yarbrough
Beau Yarbrough covers education for The Sun and the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin. Reach the author atBeau.Yarbrough@inlandnewspapers.com or follow Beau on Twitter: @inlandEd.
Joe Nelson covers San Bernardino County for The Sun, Daily Bulletin and Redlands Daily Facts. Reach the author at Joe.Nelson@inlandnewspapers.com or follow Joe on Twitter: @sbcountynow.

Rialto accused lunch money embezzler charged.. Oct. 8, 2013 The Sun, By Beau Yarbrough.

Rialto accused lunch money embezzler charged

Judy Oakes, 48, of San Bernardino was arrested at Rialto Unified´s nutrition services offices at 151 S. Cactus Ave., in August, and booked into West Valley Detention Center in Rancho Cucamonga on suspicion of burglary, embezzlement and grand theft. (Courtesy photo for The Sun) 

Judith oakes timeline

Aug. 7, 2013: Rialto Unified Nutritional Services accountant Judith Oakes arrested by Rialto Police, charged with grand theft, embezzlement and burglary.
Aug. 8, 2013: Oakes freed on bail, resigns from Rialto Unified, where she’s worked since 1997. It’s her 49th birthday.
Aug. 14, 2013: Rialto Unified Superintendent Harold Cebrun denies any wrongdoing at a contentious school board meeting.
Sept. 11, 2013: Cebrun and deputy superintendent James Wallace placed on administrative leave.
Sept. 25, 2013: A private investigator tells Rialto Unified school board that Oakes may have embezzled $3.1 million over 14 years.
Oct. 2, 2013: School board president Joe Ayala defends Cebrun after a board meeting, saying Cebrun “fell into a web, (one) that many of us men fall into.”
Oct. 4, 2013: Cebrun, through his lawyer, denies any romantic relationship with Oakes.
Oct. 4, 2013: Police and this newspaper obtain a letter supposedly written by Oakes to the school board. The letter declares that she’s guilty of the crime and that she acted alone — and that Cebrun had nothing to do with her crime.
Oct. 4, 2013: Rialto Police announce that Cebrun is not a suspect in any crime involving Oakes at this time.
Oct. 8, 2013: Oakes is charged with eight counts of embezzlement by a public or private officer and eight counts of a public officer crime. If convicted of all charges, she faces up to 11 years in state prison.
RIALTO >> A former Rialto Unified accountant has been charged with the suspected embezzling of $1.8 million in funds from the district over the past eight years.
The San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office filed felony charges against Judith Oakes, 49, late Tuesday afternoon. Oakes is charged with eight counts of embezzlement by a public or private officer and eight counts of a public officer crime. If convicted of all charges, she faces up to 11 years in state prison. She will be arraigned in Fontana Superior Court on Thursday, according to district attorney’s spokesman Christopher Lee.
Oakes was arrested Aug. 7 after twice being caught on camera putting money into her bra, according to a Rialto Police Department search warrant. At the time of her Aug. 7 arrest, she had two packets of $2,000 in $20 bills on her person, and more was found at her San Bernardino home later. She resigned from the district the next day.
Oakes could not be reached for comment on the charges. At her San Bernardino home Tuesday afternoon, a man who said he was her son declined to comment on the case.
“It’s unfortunate when people make poor choices,” school board president Joe Ayala said Tuesday afternoon. “I feel bad for her family and all those who were hurt by her actions.”
The San Bernardino County District Attorney’s investigation is one of at least five: The San Bernardino County Superintendent of Schools and California Department of Education are both conducting investigations into Oakes’ alleged crimes. The Rialto Unified school board also hired a private investigation firm, Rancho Cucamonga-based Stewart Investigations Services, to do an independent audit of the Nutrition Services department. The Rialto Police Department turned their case over to the District Attorney’s Office on Monday.
On Sept. 25, investigator Jeff Stewart told the board that Oakes may have embezzled $1.8 million over the last eight years and more than $3.1 million over 14 years. Oakes is only charged with embezzling $1.8 million, because the statute of limitations had run out on the other funds.
If true, that works out to Oakes stealing an average of $221,438 a year — or $4,258 a week — almost triple her $77,086 annual salary at Rialto Unified.
According to Stewart, there were 913 cash deposits with discrepancies over a period of 1,277 school days. The most common discrepancy between the bank deposit slips and actual cash deposits was $2,000, which occurred 540 times.
Oakes is the widow of former San Bernardino City Unified School District elementary school principal Jack Oakes. She owns two homes in San Bernardino, a variety of personal recreational vehicles and the couple regularly vacationed in Glamis, in Imperial County.
The Nutrition Services department has an annual budget of $16 million. Oakes had worked for the district since 1997.
Rialto Unified has begun the process of updating its accounting and security procedures, according to the district.
District Superintendent Harold Cebrun and Deputy Superintendent James Wallace were placed on leave Sept. 11, and the school board reaffirmed their decision to do so by a 4-1 vote on Oct. 2. (Cebrun has been out on bereavement leave since Aug. 21.)
According to Cebrun, the board made the decision to head off any accusations that the investigation could be tainted. District gossip has long linked Cebrun and Oakes romantically.
Associate Superintendent of Business Services Mohammad Z. Islam has been appointed acting superintendent for the district.
Staff writers Michel Nolan and Joe Nelson contributed to this report.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Beau Yarbrough
Beau Yarbrough covers education for The Sun and the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin. Reach the author atBeau.Yarbrough@inlandnewspapers.com or follow Beau on Twitter: @inlandEd.

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Charges Dismissed Rialto roadblock shooting (AP) Teens were accused of shooting, wounding motorists from overpass.

Charges dismissed Rialto roadblock shooting
Teens were accused of shooting, wounding motorists from overpass.
The Associated Press
FONTANA -- Charges were dismissed against two teenagers charged last year with shooting and wounding two motorists at a freeway overpass in Rialto.

Deputy District Attorney Steve Singley said Thursday that evidence remaining after a county commissioner threw out statements that Alvin Molina III, 17, and Steve Torres, 18, made to police was insufficient to tie them to the shooting.

"I do think they were involved in the crime at some level," he said. "Unfortunately, we are not able to prove their culpability at this time."

The teens were charged in connection with an Aug. 11 shooting that wounded a driver and passenger when their Chevrolet Suburban slowed for a makeshift roadblock on Interstate 210.

The teens were arrested the following evening when police observed them setting up a roadblock.

They spent six months in jail until March 1, when Knish ordered their release following a February hearing during which he threw out the statements, according to court records.

Torres' attorney, Neil Shouse, said previously that police obtained false statements by telling his client details of the case.

"Everybody seemed to jump to conclusions," Shouse said Thursday. "But when the evidence unraveled, it was apparent the wrong people were apprehended."

A conspiracy accessory charge against Debra Molina also was dismissed Thursday. She was accused of washing her son's clothes to help conceal the crime.



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BS Ranch Perspective:

This is a classic case of the Legal system Failing the Victim. The Suspects were caught making a make shift road block, which lead to their arrest. Their Parents were notified that they were in custody, while the police was obtaining a Search Warrant of the Suspects Residence to look for anything else that might tie them to the Crime. When the Search Warrant was Served, the Mother, who had over 18 years with the Probation Department as a Probation Supervisor, was Washing the clothing that had marked evidence of the Shooting, from the night that they made the first Road Block, when they Injured the Passenger and Driver of the Victim's car.

The Judge, who Dropped the Charges said that he felt that they had taken some part to this crime, however he could not tell what part that they did or didn't take, so he dropped the charges. I am wondering if the Judge has NO DOUBT, THAT THEY TOOK PART IN THE CRIME!! Then what does it take to allow it to go to trial. The Judge Drops The Charges. It isn't that bad but the Child's Mother, where the "Chip" of the "Block" came from, got her charges dropped for Both Compounding a Felony, and Tampering with Evidence to a Crime!!

The Mother, Really has Taught The children of the Neighborhood well, by Terrorizing Innocent people that are just on their way home from a movie or the mall, and they get shot at, and possibly, almost Killed. Lucky in this case Nobody was Killed.

Still we have three Juveniles that are going into adulthood, and their Mother, All of which are Criminals, and should be treated like criminals. So if you know these people and you run into them treat them for who they are! Unless they can prove to me that they are better then that, and come back by being bigger than the crime that they committed, and show that they are better then all that. I hope that they have been forced to move actually. Knowing my luck, they know where I live and they will lay in wait like they did to their victims, and then they will shoot me as I enter my home. Double or nothing says that they will miss and hit my neighbor, an unrelated party to this, BLOG!! Because that is the type of Criminal we are dealing with here.

BS Ranch