Home Baltimore Press Releases 2010 Personal Assistant Sentenced for Stealing Over $494,000 from Severna Park Couple
Info
This is archived material from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) website. It may contain outdated information and links may no longer function.

Personal Assistant Sentenced for Stealing Over $494,000 from Severna Park Couple

U.S. Attorney’s Office December 03, 2010
  • District of Maryland (410) 209-4800

BALTIMORE, MD—U.S. District Judge Catherine C. Blake sentenced Patricia A. Staugler, age 43, of Ashburn, Virginia, today to two years in prison followed by three years of supervised release and 100 hours of community service for mail fraud arising from a scheme in which she stole hundreds of thousands of dollars from a Severna Park couple for whom she worked. Judge Blake issued an order of forfeiture and restitution of $494,362.29, the amount she stole.

The sentence was announced by United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Rod J. Rosenstein and Special Agent in Charge Richard A. McFeely of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

According to Staugler’s plea agreement, Staugler worked as an executive assistant to the owner of a technology start-up business from the fall of 2002 until 2004, which the owner ran out of his home in Severna Park, Maryland. The owner and his wife also employed Staugler as their personal assistant until January 2009. Staugler’s responsibilities included arranging the couple’s household repairs and renovations, paying their bills, communicating with the payroll servicer for their other employees, reconciling their checking and savings account statements and keeping track of the couple’s finances on an accounting software program. The couple also gave Staugler authority to move funds from their personal brokerage account into their personal checking accounts; and authorized Stauger to pay their credit card bills from their personal checking accounts, and to sign the wife’s name on personal checks to satisfy the couple’s debts.

Without the couple’s permission, Staugler added her name to the couple’s personal credit card account and by early November 2004 began using the credit card in her name to make purchases for herself. By February 2005 she began using her access to the couple’s personal checking accounts to electronically transfer funds to herself to satisfy her debts, including paying the property taxes and power company bills for her home. She also wrote checks to herself that she deposited into her personal checking account to pay her home renovation debts. Staugler hid her illicit transfers by entering misleading entries into the couple’s accounting software.

In late 2005, Staugler began working for a related start-up business and continued to work part-time for the couple. After paying business expenses using the couple’s money, she submitted expense reimbursement requests to the business' accounting department, which issued Staugler reimbursement checks that she deposited in her personal bank account.

When the couple resumed control of their personal finances in early 2009, they discovered the illicit transfers of their money for Staugler’s personal benefit, including payments: of sizeable membership dues over three years at a luxury resort near Staugler’s home in Virginia; for tutoring service and college tuition for Staugler’s daughter; to 5-star hotels, restaurants and bars in Washington, D.C., New York City and northern Virginia; for installing windows in Staugler’s home; and to a tanning salon, jewelry stores and phone companies.

According to Staugler’s plea agreement and evidence presented to the Court at sentencing, during the course of the fraud scheme from at least November 2004 to February 2009, Staugler made more than 900 unauthorized payments or fraudulent transactions, resulting in over $494,000 in losses to the victims.

United States Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein commended the FBI for their investigative work and thanked Assistant U.S. Attorneys Sujit Raman and Joyce K. McDonald, who prosecuted the case.

This content has been reproduced from its original source.