Anonymous Tip Leads to Embezzling Conviction
By John Wisley
An anonymous tip called into a corporate ethics
hotline started an investigation that landed a former Troy resident in
the county jail.
John Foust, 42, will spend the next 11 months in
jail and the next five years on probation. Oakland Circuit Judge Edward
Sosnick also ordered Foust to pay $240,000 in restitution after he pleaded
no contest to embezzling money from his former employer, PPG Industries,
a Pittsburgh company with offices in Troy.
Most corporations handle white-collar crimes internally,
but PPG Industries joins a small but growing number of companies that
also seeks criminal charges.
A serious crime had been committed, and we
felt we had an obligation to notify law enforcement, said PPG spokesman
Jeff Worden. When substantial evidence is uncovered that indicates
that a crime has been committed, our first thoughts leaned toward prosecution.
We believe it was the right thing to do.
DaimlerChrysler took a similar stance in August
against a man who allegedly bilked $278,000 from the company by padding
the resumes of contract engineers. His case is pending.
It is a situation where the defendant has
to be punished, said assistant prosecutor Greg Townsend, who handled
Fousts case and asked the judge to order jail time.
Investigators said Foust took the money by padding
his expense reports.
He set up phony corporations and said that
they provided products to him, said Troy police Sgt. James Clark. He
filed expense reports for educational seminars he didnt attend.
In one case, Foust claimed to have attended a seminar
at the University of Michigan. He turned in his application form and
a copy of his check to the University of Michigan, Clark said.
But when investigators looked closer, they found
he never attended and the university was never paid. Clark said the case
began with an anonymous call. Company investigators looked into it and
the trail led to Foust.
I still dont know who called it in, said
Gary Marino, corporate security manager for PPG. They just said
you might want to look in this area.
Company officials started the ethics hotline in
February 1999 and said they get more than 100 calls a year on it. The
calls involve not only allegations of wrongdoing but also safety and
communication issues that employees want addressed.
Fousts title was managing director of global
launch for Mexico. He had been with the company for 22 years before being
fired after the investigation. Investigators said Foust was going through
a divorce during the period he was taking the money.
Fousts lawyer, Steven Bullock, sought probation
so his client could continue to work to repay the company.
Its kind of a Catch-22, Bullock
said. Hes certainly not making as much as he was.
Foust currently works as a real estate agent, but
will lose his license with the felony conviction. He will be allowed
to serve in the countys work release program, working during the
day and spending his nights at the jail.
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