The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The Law seems to above the law

- George Mathis News to Me

Sometimes the news strikes close to home.

Sandra Putnam, a former top official at the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion, pleaded guilty Monday to racketeeri­ng and violating the oath of a public officer.

She hired my wife to work for her at the GBI.

Putnam faced up to 20 years in prison for fraudulent charges on her state purchasing card. She admitted to spending $60,000 on items including a leather sofa, furniture to go beside her pool, clothes and gifts for her then-boyfriend and now-husband (a former Sandy Springs Police captain).

Most folks would get prison time for stealing so much, but the law works in strange ways when applied to those paid to enforce it.

Putnam’s sentence? Ten years probation, which sounds like a long time until you realize it might not last the winter. Her probation’s over once she’s completed 200 hours of community service and repaid the $60,268.04 she charged on a state credit card from May 2013 to August 2016.

Putnam’s attorney says her family has already raised about $40,000.

Despite GBI Director Vernon Keenan saying Putnam “is an absolute embarrassm­ent to the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion, to the law enforcemen­t profession,” he didn’t fire her. She was allowed to resign.

She didn’t lose her law enforcemen­t certificat­ion. Theoretica­lly, she could go to a town without newspapers and be a police chief.

She didn’t lose her pension. After 21 years, her salary was over $100,000 a year, so taxpayers will be paying about $60,000 a year in early retirement.

During sentencing, DeKalb County Superior Court Judge Clarence Seeliger said Putnam used her purchasing card as a “slush fund” but her years of “honorable service” in law enforcemen­t off

set the harm she’d done. Really? Or did we just hear a judge tell us police officers get special treatment? I think we know the answer. Police officers are rarely charged with crimes.

Let’s compare Putnam’s punishment to that of former DeKalb Commission­er Elaine Boyer, who was charged in a federal case for funneling about $60,000 in public funds to a bank account used by her and her husband. Boyer was sentenced to 14 months; her husband to a year and one day.

Several years ago, Georgia Tech employee Michelle Harris pleaded guilty to one count of racketeeri­ng for $170,000 in fraudulent charges on her state purchasing card. Her sentence? 10 years.

Thurbert Baker, Georgia’s attorney general at the time, said, “Ten years in prison is a clear message that violating the public trust will not be tolerated in Georgia.”

If 10 years in prison is a “clear message” to potential criminals, what does a few months probation tell law enforcemen­t?

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