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OIG: National Park Service's Northeast Regional Director Committed Travel Fraud

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Michael Caldwell, the Northeast Region director of the National Park Service, has been reassigned while Park Service Director Jon Jarvis reviews allegations that he committed fraud in filing travel vouchers/NPS

A regional director for the National Park Service, desiring "nicer" experiences on his travels, ran up nearly $11,500 in personal travel that he billed the Park Service for, and also collected nearly $6,000 in pay and per diem on some of these travels while not working, according to the Interior Department's Office of Inspector General.

Between 2011 and 2015, Michael A. Caldwell, the agency's Northeast Regional director, rented bigger vehicles than he should have to bring friends on some of his travels, covered lodging costs of personal guests, was reimbursed for mileage "that he never drove," rented an SUV for "an official trip two days before his official business was scheduled to start," and also "spent a day driving the SUV 450 miles out of the way for unofficial purposes," the OIG's report said.

"Caldwell admitted during his interviews that he had taken these trips and that he had knowingly violated federal travel regulations. He said that in doing so he had taken advantage of his official positions, first as a GS-15 deputy regional director and then as a member of the Senior Executive Service. He said he deserved, at minimum, a suspension," the OIG's report released Thursday said, adding that the case had been submitted to Park Service Director Jon Jarvis for disposition.

The case report didn't indicate whether Mr. Caldwell made restitution. But in the seven-page report (attached below) he was very forthcoming in admitting to the allegations made against him, stating that his travel vouchers had been "tainted and fraudulent.”

More so, he told the investigators that "he had arranged his official travel to suit his personal travel plans. He admitted that he was not trying to save the government money on his trips and was instead trying to have 'nicer' experiences. He said that if everyone in the government worked the way he did, 'we wouldn’t get anything done.'"

Park Service officials in Washington said Thursday evening that the matter was under review.

"The leadership of the National Park Service appreciates the Office of Inspector General for investigating this case and recognizes the importance of independent investigations in situations like this. The National Park Service is committed to creating a more accountable and responsible culture at all levels of the organization, particularly among its leaders," Tom Crosson, the agency's chief spokesman, wrote in an email. 

"The OIG’s findings related to Mr. Caldwell’s actions are very serious and the National Park Service is in the process of considering disciplinary action against Mr. Caldwell that is consistent with due process," he added. "In the interim, the National Park Service determined that it would be in the best interest of the organization to temporarily reassign him to duties outside of the regional office, while disciplinary action is considered.

"It is unfortunate that these actions have called into question the judgment of a leader with an otherwise strong record of public service," Mr. Crosson said.

During his reassignment, Mr. Caldwell will work under the Park Service's deputy director, Mike Reynolds, said Mr. Crosson, although he didn't know specifically what the regional director would be doing. Pending his reassigment, the regional office will be run by its deputy directors, he said.

The Northeast Region encompasses more than 80 units of the National Park System, including Acadia National Park, Valley Forge National Historical Park, Shenandoah National Park, and Valley Forge National Historical Park, as well as 21 National Heritage Areas, 

The investigation was launched in March after allegations were made that Mr. Caldwell had traveled to Cape Cod National Seashore "under the guise of official business when in fact he went there on vacation." The investigators also determined, and the regional director acknowledged, that he accepted free housing in a rental cottage owned by a Park Service employee, a violation of federal regulations that both prohibit supervisors from accepting gifts from subordinates and subordinates from giving their supervisors gifts.

Along with confirming the allegations against Mr. Caldwell, the OIG investigators concluded that the Park Service poorly monitors its employees' travel expenses. Peggy O'Dell, who was deputy director for operations before retiring from the agency this past summer, was supposed to approve travel vouchers of regional directors, the report said. However, she had an assistant handle that task on her behalf, the report said.

"O’Dell said she had taken it on faith that the travelers who submitted their authorizations and vouchers to her were being honest, and she acknowledged that the NPS process for reviewing these documents could be improved," the investigators wrote. "She said that one way to improve the process would be for the regional directors to post their leave information in a clearly visible location. She also said that NPS needed to address the practicality of making high-level managers such as herself responsible for reviewing every travel voucher for multiple direct reports."

The bottom line, Ms. O'Dell told the investigators, was that "that the entire process depended on travelers telling the truth when submitting their travel documents."

Comments

Rick, you know the story about the boy who kept crying wolf. When a wolf in fact appeared, no one in the village gave the boy a second thought.

The more the Press cries wolf, the less the public listens. Pedophile now, is it? Or did you think that one up yourself? You have evidence, of course. You were among those picked for the jury or have some email the Russians hacked. Speaking of the Russians, how dare they spy on us while we spy on them?

Wolf! After eight years in the White House, this is the first time President Obama saw a wolf? But seriously, be careful what words you choose. As Abraham Lincoln reminded his opponents, you can only fool the public some of the time. Donald Trump cannot expect a honeymoon, either, and history certainly won't be giving him one. But yes, how did he win the election? He knew better than to keep crying wolf.


Al, I read the affadavits of the then early teen girls who he dallied with, along with his billionaire pedophile buddy, Epstein, who is a Level 3 registered sex offender -- the most dangerous kind, "a threat to public safety" -- after being convicted of misconduct with another underage girl. I believed them. If you're going to apologize for him on that, like you have for other things, that is totally your choice. Just like the smokescreen you summon about the Russians. Sorry, Al - I know you're well respected in NPS circles, but since this election you have lost your academic altitude and respect in my mind. If we talk, it should be on other topics.


Talk about losing altitude. Just in case Rick B. can't make it to the second paragraph, I paste it and the third paragraph here. A link to the entire story is below.

But "Filthy Rich," in which the creator of the Alex Cross series takes on the real-life saga of the Palm Beach millionaire pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, couldn't deliver evidence that either Trump or Clinton's husband, former President Bill Clinton, partook in Epstein's salacious sex games with often-troubled teenage girls from the poorer parts of West Palm Beach.

"We found nothing to connect Trump and Clinton to what Epstein did with young girls," said Tim Malloy, a former reporter and anchor at WPTV-Channel 5 in West Palm Beach who co-authored the tome with Patterson and Vanity Fair investigative reporter John Connolly. "Both Bill Clinton and Donald Trump know Epstein and may be friends with him. But that appears to be the extent of it."

http://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/ent-columns-blogs/jose-lambiet/...

Now, can we get back to the national parks?

 

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/ent-columns-blogs/jose-lambiet/...



Very Sad.... Please resign sir, if you have not already.

 

 Thankyou ,

name withheld for fear of reprisal


Interesting post Alfred, as we all see things a little differently and as the thread has morphed into the politics, please excuse, but I have been listening to the President Elect for over a year now, my own view is he won as a first rate demagogue, he preached fear,intolerance, bullying, let alone crying wolf.  I do think you have a point, history will be the judge, and Mr. Thrump's true colors will shine through, whatever they maybe. His cabinet picks to date do not leave much room for optimism on my part. I hope I am wrong.


 I'm sure if i did something of this nature.. I would not only lose my job, I'd be punished to the fullest extent of the law. You have disgraced not only yourself but the people of the United states of america...We call them TAXPAYERS!


Ron, what did the other side "preach?" Here in Seattle, and much of Washington State, Democrats preach that no Republican deserves to hold public office. And so we get the government we deserve, now a government better at inbreeding than upholding the rule of law.

I will grant you that Donald Trump was outspoken, if you will grant me the reason why. He needed to be. No one listens anymore to the rule of law.

Look at the thread here. People even in the Park Service making excuses for a colleague who broke the law.

Am I being a xenophobe, a racist, a demagogue, or a whatever to insist on the rule of law? Yes, says the Democratic Party. You have no right to disagree with our interpretation of what it means to follow the law. Question for me when I ran for Mayor of Seattle: "Dr. Runte, have you ever voted Republican?" Hint: Answer yes if you expect to lose.

I am no fan of Donald Trump, but yes, I know my history. When any party becomes that desperate to win--and that convinced of its own infallibility--it should not be surprised when people lose confidence in everything it has to say, especially where people want change. 

We don't want it yet in Seattle, but we will. As will the people of San Francisco, Chicago, Philadelphia, Boston, and New York. One day they will wake up and ask the people spewing labels what the labels really mean. Here in Seattle, they now mean that you had better make $250,000 a year if you hope to own a modest house. After all, you are paying for everyone else's housing, utilities, and child care. As for what I mean by "everyone," fill in the blanks. 

Perhaps not in "blue" Seattle, people simply ran out of patience. They didn't elect their government to rob them and pay someone else. From the dim recesses of high-school history, they again recognized what a spoils system is--and means. "Al, have you ever voted Republican?" Since I no longer expect to run for Mayor, the answer--even if with reluctance--is yes.

 

 

 

 


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