Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

‘ Bunny’ Welsh charged with theft

Former county sheriff and boyfriend face counts in fundraisin­g scheme

- By Michael P. Rellahan mrellahan@ 21st- centurymed­ia. com @ ChescoCour­tNews on Twitter

WEST CHESTER » Former Chester County Sheriff Carolyn “Bunny” Welsh and her live- in boyfriend, a former deputy sheriff, were charged Tuesday with criminal counts involving fundraisin­g efforts to support the Sheriff’s Office K- 9 Unit.

Welsh and former Lt. Harry McKinney appeared before Senior Magisteria­l District Judge Daniel Maisano of West Chester, accompanie­d by their attorneys and were arraigned on two misdemeano­r counts of theft. A preliminar­y hearing has been set for next month.

The charges grew out of an investigat­ion into the fundraisin­g activities of the Friends of the

Chester County Sheriff’s Office K- 9 Unit, which was operated out of the office that Welsh headed for 20 years, by the county Controller’s Office. The charges are being handled by the state Attorney General’s Office.

Welsh, 76, and McKinney, 64, both of Pennsbury, were released on their own recognizan­ce after the formal proceeding­s at which they were notified of the charges against them.

“Bunny Welsh used her position of power for her and her partner Harry McKinney’s own personal gain instead of serving her community as she was elected to do,” state Attorney General Josh Shapiro said in a statement after Welsh and McKinney turned themselves in to the state authoritie­s for fingerprin­ting and processing.

The pair “allegedly used public employees to perform work for private charity events both on and off- duty at the expense of Chester County, and McKinney then used those fundraised dollars to cover his own personal expenses,” said Shapiro. “This blatant misappropr­iation of funds is unacceptab­le. My office has made over 60 public corruption arrests since I took

offi ce and I will continue to hold any public offi cials accountabl­e for abusing their offi ce and public trust.”

Special Agent Sean McGlinn said in a criminal complaint that Welsh placed McKinney in a supervisor­y role in the Sheriff ’ s Offi ce, even though he carried an entry- level work classifi cation. From that position, according to the complaint, McKinney utilized the resources of the offi ce to conduct all the fundraisin­g for the offi ce, but primarily the private fundraisin­g for the K- 9 Unit that the two had initiated in the mid- 2000s.

Even though expenses for the K- 9 Offi cers were paid for by grants, community donations, and private contributi­ons, McKinney was put in sole charge of raising and dispersing those funds, absent any other county or offi cial oversight, according to the arrest affi davit.

The largest of the fundraisin­g eff orts, according to McGlinn’s complaint, was an annual Wild Game Dinner, at which those buying tickets could feast on treats like alligator bites, deer braciole, stuff ed quail, crawfish casserole and an assortment of wild game sausages. Money raised from the event would go to the K- 9 Friends organizati­on.

The complaint states that because the dinner required a great deal of volunteer work, deputies would volunteer to prepare for the event during their normal workday. McKinney would oversee the deputies running the events, while Welsh would allow them to perform those duties while being paid by the county, even though the events were private.

It also alleges that the pair used public resources to compensate the deputies for time they spent on the events outside their workday.

“For any time spent volunteeri­ng after work hours,” McGlinn wrote, Welsh awarded the deputies with 1/ 5 hours of compensato­ry time per hour that could be accrued and used at a later date … while still being paid by Chester County.

The charges levied against the two include theft of services by diversion and theft by unlawful taking. The fi rst charge concerns knowingly diverting services to the benefi t of others they are not entitled to — allowing on- duty sheriffs to perform nongovernm­ental work during regular work hours while they were being paid by the county. The second involves rewarding those deputies with days off for their work at private charity events outside normal business hours.

McKinney was also found to have reimbursed himself from the K- 9 unit fund for expenses that involved a family pet who was not a working canine, the complaint states. For that, he was charged with a second count of theft by unlawful taking.

The complaint does not specify the amount of the theft, but because the counts are charged as misdemeano­rs, the value would be less than $ 2,000.

Welsh is represente­d by veteran white- collar criminal defense attorney Geoffrey Johnson of Philadelph­ia. In a brief telephone exchange Tuesday, Johnson said that his client had been charged only with “providing comp time to deputy sheriff s for working at a charity event,” but declined to comment further.

McKinney’s attorney, criminal defense attorney Rob Donatoni of West Chester, said only that the charges against his client, “speak for themselves.”

Welsh, who retired from the offi ce in 2020 after having served five terms, is among the most recognizab­le of county elected officials in recent memory. She was photograph­ed with President Donald J. Trump at the White House on multiple occasions, wearing her navy blue ceremonial sheriff ’ s uniform, and was among his earliest supporters. Her exploits were carried on the pages of newspapers across the region, with the simple moniker of “Sheriff Bunny” letting people know who the star of the story would be.

The K- 9 Unit was among her biggest public relations efforts, becoming a wellpublic­ized and highly popular part of the offi ce, with public events and promotiona­l appearance­s by K- 9 officers with names like Luke and Nero and Dexter and Murphy at local schools and organizati­ons. The offi cers had particular skills such as bomb or drug detection, tracking criminal suspects, or hunting down lost children, and were frequently loaned to outside law enforcemen­t agencies. The dogs were also on display almost daily in the county Justice Center, with 10 K- 9 teams deployed throughout the building at various times and places.

In November 2018, however, she announced that she would not seek re- election and that she planned to pursue other opportunit­ies, although she did not specify what those opportunit­ies entail.

“Sometimes God leads you down a path and opens doors where you least expect it,” Welsh said. “After serving as sheriff for 20 years, I will be looking forward to a new challenge in 2020.” This summer, she served as a delegate to the Republican National Convention, which ended with the re- nomination of President Trump.

McKinney was terminated from his position by incoming county Sheriff Fredda Maddox in January.

Welsh campaigned locally for the president and appeared at her local polling place at the Chadds Ford Elementary School on Election Day, where she was photograph­ed smiling and not wearing a facial mask, despite the county being in the grips of a resurgence of the coronaviru­s. Days afterward, reports were confi rmed that she had entered Chester County Hospital for treatment of COVID- 19. She was released last week.

The challenge that Welsh faced most in 2018, however, was a unique one. In August, newly elected county Controller Margaret Reif, a Democrat, issued a subpoena for fi nancial records held by Welsh’s offi ce for the Sheriff ’ s K- 9. Unit. It was the fi rst time in memory that one county offi cial had publicly and openly questioned the way another ran his or her offi ce.

Reif and her team of auditors suspected, and later said they confi rmed, that funds that had been collected for the K- 9 offi cers and their handlers had been misused by people in the offi ce, most notably McKinney, Welsh’s longtime livein life partner.

After some disagreeme­nt, some of the records that Reif’s offi ce requested were turned over. Though incomplete, they formed a picture of improper use of the funds that the controller later detailed in a remarkable summary.

The expenses questioned included $ 4,718 paid for a stay at the Hilton Baltimore in June and July 2015; at least $ 5,290.74 on 75 miscellane­ous lunches and dinners over a three- year period; $ 4,200 for a custommade golf cart; $ 2,500 for tires and front and back winches on a privately owned pickup truck; and $ 579 for a one- night stay at the Quality Hotel in Exton in September 2017.

The audit estimated that more than $ 198,000 was raised and spent over the years 2015 to 2017 for the K- 9 unit through private donations to the sheriff ’ s offi ce that used county property and employees to accept and record them.

Among other expenses, paid for with checks and credit cards, the controller said that it could not ascertain how those individual payments directly related to the services K- 9 Unit was formed to provide to law enforcemen­t agencies and others in and out of the county.

The 23 instances of questionab­le actions by the K- 9 Unit that a summary report of the controller’s audit cited — including failure to register as a charitable organizati­on, fi le for tax- exempt status, and establish an overall “formal or informal structure” for receipts and disburseme­nts — led the offi ce to the rare step of bringing the matter to the attention of other elected offi cials in the county, according to a statement issued by the controller’s offi ce.

Welsh and her supporters fi red back, saying the fundraisin­g was not within the controller’s purview since they were private, not taxpayer, dollars.

The case was referred to the state Attorney General’s Offi ce by former county District Attorney Tom Hogan, who said his offi ce had a confl ict with the matter because of its past involvemen­t with the Friends of the K- 9 unit organizati­on.

On Tuesday, Reif declined to comment on the Attorney General’s charges.

Welsh also faces a civil action fi led by the controller’s offi ce over allegedly inflated overtime payments made to McKinney with her approval for the care of the K- 9s he owned when he worked for the Sheriff ’ s Offi ce. The controller is seeking the return of $ 67,000 in payments made to McKinney over a three- year period.

That action, which was also reportedly the subject of a state Grand Jury investigat­ion, remains in Common Pleas Court.

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