The New Mexico Attorney General demanded that a charter founder resign, but she refuses to do so.
You think taxpayers just don’t care what happens to their money? You think taxpayers think that anyone should step up and claim public money and do with it as they please?
New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas is demanding the immediate resignation of Analee Maestas from the Albuquerque Public Schools Board of Education after fraud and embezzlement allegations involving the charter school she founded and managed.
“School board members have a duty to treat their position as a public trust and at all times act in a manner that justifies the public’s confidence in them,” Balderas said in a statement.
Balderas emailed a letter to Maestas on Monday saying “it is clear that you are no longer qualified to hold your position as a board member” and that if she did not immediately resign, “my office will take all appropriate legal actions.”
Maestas’ attorney, Marc M. Lowry, said she has no plans to step down.
“The Attorney General’s letter is more concerned with capturing a headline than it is with the pursuit of the truth,” Lowry said in an emailed statement.
“Dr. Maestas has not engaged in any conduct that violated her oath of office with the APS Board, or any other law. Dr. Maestas has brought over 45 years of experience and commitment to childhood education to uphold her oath to APS and maintain the public’s trust, and used her APS office only to advance the public benefit. The Attorney General is wrong to suggest otherwise.”
Balderas’ letter mentions two reviews by state Auditor Tim Keller that found serious problems with apparent misuse of funds regarding La Promesa Early Learning Center, the charter school Maestas started in 2008.
This month, Keller released a report that said it appeared Maestas’ daugther, the school’s then-assistant business manager, had embezzled nearly $500,000 under the watch of Maestas. And an earlier report in February 2016 showed that the school submitted a suspicious receipt to the New Mexico Public Education Department for reimbursement when Maestas claimed the $342.40 invoice was for carpet cleaning at the school. However, it appeared the receipt had been written over and the cleaning company reported that it actually worked on ducts at her home.
In his letter, Balderas wrote that “those investigations appear to implicate potential violations of numerous criminal and civil statutes.”
“While those matters are pending, the New Mexico Constitution does not require that you be found guilty of any conduct related to them to be declared unfit to hold your office, and your oath to uphold the very same Constitution now demands your resignation,” he wrote to Maestas.
But Lowry said that “if the Attorney General had read the State Auditor’s report, he would understand that Dr. Maestas is innocent, and that the State Auditor did not make a single finding suggesting that Dr. Maestas participated in that report’s allegations of embezzlement or fraud.”
Last week, Maestas denied any knowledge of the financial mismanagement at her school and blamed her daughter’s substance abuse problems.
Julieanne Maestas diverted about half a million dollars from the charter school into her personal bank account from June 2010 to July 2016, according to Keller’s investigation. In addition, she deposited about $177,000 worth of checks that were payable to the former executive director – her mother – as well as to her boyfriend, who was a school vendor.

What was Thomas Jefferson’s advice for nourishing the Tree of Liberty?
LikeLike
More ECOT news in Ohio:
ECOT’s former superintendent denied in June that the school had used tax dollars to purchase political commercials attacking the Ohio Department of Education, but its board effectively wrote a blank taxpayer check in 2016 to combat “negative portrayals” through “strategic communications,” records show.
The school’s non-profit corporation board “authorizes and approves the allocation of any funds at the (school’s) disposal to be paid to vendors, professionals, or other outside entities for purposes of defending the corporation and/or promoting the mission.”
The board vote came at a special meeting on July 15, 2016, just days after Franklin County Common Pleas Judge Stephen McIntosh denied the Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow’s request for a temporary restraining order blocking a Department of Education attendance audit that will eventually claw back $60 million in state revenue from the school over two years.
That resolution resurfaced at an ECOT board meeting Tuesday night, because state auditors pointed out that the line authorizing who was in charge of carrying out the unbridled spending was left blank.”
This continues unabated. Apparently no one in Ohio government has any power to stop it- not the legislature, not the governor, not the AG.
They’re captured. Helpless before the mighty power of this one charter chain.
Ohio government can (and will) seize your house if you don’t pay property taxes but they can’t do anything about ECOT. They sent armed agents into Columbus public schools and people went to prison but they’re helpless here. YEARS this has been going on. The only people who have acted are judges, and ECOT ignores their orders.
http://www.dispatch.com/news/20170927/ecot-board-approved-blank-check-for-strategic-communications
LikeLike
This is why charters should be under the authority of local school boards. The states are not willing to take responsibility for them. Charters’ finances should be subject to public scrutiny. When an offender is found guilty of fraud, there should be a prison sentence. They should also be banned from ever being involved in charter schools. The current situation in many states allows for profiteering, exploitative practices and little to no oversight or accountability. The charter industry needs monitoring, and the states should not be handing over public funds without knowing funds are being legitimately spent on education.
LikeLike
In contrast with LAUSD’s indicted school board member who I guess is technically innocent until proven guilty. But there’s very little chance the indictment would ever have been brought, given the culprit’s prominence, and given the length of time this has been knowingly investigated, were there no fire beneath the smoke.
LA’s Ref Rodriguez should step down and it’s a wonderful idea that perhaps the AG could step in and speak out. It’s clear as can be that these scoundrels will dig their heels in and not budge, hoping to affect as much “reform” as possible before the bailiffs remove them with handcuffs. Since this is a civilized society, it would be nice if something could happen a little shy of this.
LikeLike
Why is a charter school operator allowed to be on the Albuquerque Bd of Ed at all? isn’t this a conflict of interest?
LikeLike
Unfortunately, Leonie, we live in a banana republic, a sign of which is when elites and their agents loot with impunity, as we see here.
LikeLike
OMG! Lots of $$$$$ must be at stake and jail time, too.
LikeLike
Knee jerk reaction … why is the AG of New Mexico disregarding DUE PROCESS? Is he headline hunting again?
Is her daughter is proven to be the guilty party, that does not automatically make her knowledgeable of or guilty of anything. I realize in recent years the left has preferred to use smear tactics in place of facts, but that is NOT how this country was set up. This is not North Korea or Venezuela, or one of the other socialist/communist countries in this world.
Get your facts and follow due process … That protects the rights of EVERYONE.
LikeLike
Linda Giffen said, “I realize in recent years the left has preferred to use smear tactics in place of facts”
Linda, one of the words you used is wrong – LEFT should have been Alt-Right and GOP
For instance:
LikeLike