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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "Kent Amos Paid Himself over $1 Million a Year"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Why should he go to jail...? He did not steal the funds, he is not embezzling the funds, he sort a salary and it was approved. Get a life. The public education is free not the work.[/quote] The fact that Amos has hired Frederick Cooke, longtime consigliere to Marion Barry says volumes about the corrupt DC crowd he runs with and the seriousness of the trouble he is on. It's pretty likely that the Feds will be all over his tax filings as well. [b] Yes, this crony bro is likely to do time.[/quote][/b] I doubt it. Unfortunately, what he has done is not illegal. It may be unethical, but not illegal. They need to change the law and have restrictions. I would be happy for them to fix this loophole and make it difficult for the for-profit charters to do abuse the system they way they have been doing it for years. [/quote] However, every charter school in DC is required to be organized as a non-profit corporation. That's a requirement of the school reform act. Non-profit corporations are required to retain their profits, rather than distribute them to their owners. So, the more subtle question is whether it is legal for the owner of a non-profit corporation in DC to subvert this provision of the law by paying out the profits to himself in the form of salary, rather than distributing the profits to himself in the form of dividends. I suspect that subverting this provision of the law is not so easy. This is probably a civil violation, and the DC attorney general undoubtedly has the power to force Amos to pay back that portion of his salary that was in excess of a "reasonable" amount -- however that would be calculated. It might also be a criminal violation. Any lawyers care to chime in?[/quote] He did violate the law though, there was collusion on behalf of the board which shortened the period for competitive bids making it impossible for anyone else but Kent Amos to get the contract. While he was busy taking millions for salary the people who performed the functions he was contractually obligated to do, were paid employees of the school in essence the school "double payed" for administrative services. All of which came at the expense of a strong educational platform for the children, the shortfall caused by the misappropriation of these funds adversely impacted all of the programmatic and education initiatives that benefit children. [/quote]
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