On January 5, 2022, Kathy Gould of the Florida Management Services department sent two invoices to North Bay Village to cover the costs of the Lewis Velken pension fraud. One invoice is for $345,653 for half Velken's DROP payment and the second is for $126,893 for pension overpayments, totaling $472,546.
Lewis Velken Settled A Claim of Pension Fraud.
In April of 2018, retired Miami Dade Police Lieutenant Lewis Velken was sworn in as North Bay Village's Chief of Police. In August of 2018, Velken moved over to become Interim Village Manager where he served until January 2019.
It turned out that when Velken was sworn in as Police Chief, he was not actually a Village employee, a fact that was never made public. Instead his pay was routed through a 3rd party, alternately referred to as a friend and in one deposition as his sister-in-law, Stephanie Leon, a Miami Lakes Realtor.
This was done so that Velken did not have to repay his DROP (Deferred Retirement Option Plan) payment of $691,307 and suspend his pension payments while he worked for North Bay Village.
The scheme was first made public in 2019, here in this blog, and the Florida Retirement System this month settled the claim with Velken by accepting a payment of $345,653 or half the DROP Payment and disallowing the final 5 years of Velken pension which will reduce his benefits significantly.
The Florida Retirement System Says North Bay Village Owes The Rest
Under state law, North Bay Village is jointly liable with Velken for the payments and the FRS wants North Bay Village to pay $472,546 for its part in the scheme to circumvent the FRS rules. That means the taxpayers are expected to pay for this.
Their reasoning is based on Florida Statute 121.091 (9) (c) (3) which reads
A retiree employed in violation of this paragraph and an employer who employs or appoints such person are jointly and severally liable for reimbursement to the retirement trust fund, including the Florida Retirement System Trust Fund and the Public Employee Optional Retirement Program Trust Fund, from which the benefits were paid.
It is the phrase "Jointly and severally liable" that comes into play. That says that both the individual (Lewis Velken) and the employer (North Bay Village) are liable to make the FRS whole. North Bay Village may be liable.
How Did This Even Come About?
For people who were not here in 2018, when the Village was led by Mayor Connie Leon Kreps and Commissioners Laura Cattabriga, Andreana Jackson and an empty suit from North Bay Island, it's hard to explain how crazy things got so I will refer you to this article in in the Miami New Times or just scroll through this blog.
The particular facts in this case are that in April 2018, after firing Police Chief Carlos Noriega (later reinstated), then Village Manager Marlen Martell needed to find a new police chief and recently retired MDPD lieutenant Lewis Velken was recommended.
There was a problem According to FRS rules, if you retire from one FRS employer (Miami Dade), you are ineligible to be hired by another FRS employer (North Bay Village) within 6 months or you must repay your retirement benefit ($691,000 for Velken in a lump sum and a monthly pension check) Wait 6 months and it gets easier and wait a year, it's free and clear.
Velken did not want to return his money or short his pension check, and apparently didn't want to wait.
This part is undisputed and based on the sworn testimony of both Velken and Martell in their court testimony.
Velken contacted Stephanie Leon of Miami Lakes and had her act as contractor for his payments to be routed to him thereby claiming to be a contractor, not an employee.
This part is disputed. According to sworn testimony by both Velken and Martell, they ran the proposal by Norman Powell, the North Bay Village attorney at the time, and Powell said that he did not see a problem with the arrangement. From Lewis Velken's testimony in his complaint against the FRS. From :
STATE OF FLORIDADIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGSCASE NO.: 19-2746
Transcript Vol. 4 Page 433 where Lewis Velken was testifying about how this came about:
And what is your understanding of the relationship between Mr. Powell and North Bay Village at that point in time?Velken: At that point, I was told that he was lead counsel for the village. So, he had the ultimate say as to whether or not this would be an appropriate arrangement to -- or agreement to go into.Q And what did he advise?
A He [Powell] said that he didn't see anything wrong with it, that he was going to research it further, but there was nothing wrong with it, since they had other contracted employees. And if there was any issues, that by the next day, he'd let them know in the morning, because they had scheduled the sweaing in ceremony for later on, for the 18th, in the evening.
In the same hearing, Martell recounted that same story.
Although Velken as a 30 year policeman and Martell as Village Manager should have known better in my opinion, they both state they were relying on legal advice from then Village Attorney Norman C Powell.
Powell denies that he knew about the arrangement in his deposition and called it a "complete fabrication" in the Miami Herald article about the issue.
But he did know about it by September of 2018 when he wrote a series of emails to then Labor Attorney David Miller asking him to prepare an actual full blown employment agreement with Velken.
What Role Did The 2018 Commission under Mayor Kreps Play?
None. Well, not publicly.
You see none of the people who knew brought the issue to the commission for a vote.
Connie Leon Kreps later stated that she signed the checks for Stephanie Leon (no known relation) and did not question why our Village Manager (Velken) was paid through a 3rd party.
I have been told that 2 of the commissioners approached Powell in September of 2018 and on page 458 of the transcript referenced that unnamed commissioners approached "lead counsel Norman Powell" to organize Velken's permanent hire.
On September 5, 2018, Norman Powell sent a series of emails to the Village labor attorney about creating a permanent employment agreement. These email are published here in an earlier blog entry.
Buckle Up. It Gets Weirder. There Was Never A Contract.
It turns out Velken never submitted a written contract to the Village
It seems that Velken/Leon never actually had a signed contract with the Village.
Even though Leon was invoicing and receiving payments for Velken's service and Mayor Kreps was unquestioningly signing them and the Village Manager and Attorney at the time knew Velken was not an employee, there was not even a written agreement for his services and the actual amount agreed orally varies.
Checks were just being cut and disbursed without a contract and without commission authorization.
Don't We Have Checks And Balances Against This?
Yes. The Charter is very clear that any contracted arrangement exceeding $15,000 must be approved by the commission. That did not happen.
The Charter is also clear that any employee or contractor who knows of a situation violating local, state or federal laws is obligated to report the violation. Nobody did.
The Charter is very clear that the same applies to elected officials, including then mayor Kreps. That did not happen.
There could be an argument that the Village cannot be responsible because the individuals involved in the scheme hid the information for reasons of their own.
If They Hid It, How Come We Have To Pay?
The FRS probably doesn't care about how it happened. Seriously even I get tired writing about this. The FRS is simply holding North Bay Village liable and will leave it up to North Bay Village to go after the individual actors.
In his statement on the matter, Mayor Brent Latham writes "Rest assured that Mr. Velken and his facilitators, and not the taxpayers of North Bay Village, will pay the cost of any wrong doing in this case. "
You can and should read his whole statement here: https://northbayvillage-fl.gov/an-update-from-mayor-brent-latham/
I am not a strip club lobbyist so I don't have lot of municipal law under my belt, but I suspect that the Village will have to pay the full or a negotiated amount out of tax revenues and then pursue the individuals who actually effectuated the caper.
Where Are Those Individuals Now?
Lewis Velken himself terminated his unwritten contract in January of 2019 when the story broke. Velken previously sent a notice to the Village with an Intent to Sue if his pension was revoked. Whether or not he is able to do so is an open question.
Velken is currently working as a Reserve Police Officer in Indian Creek.
Marlen Martell was let go in August of 2018 after 105 days on the job and collected $127,000 in severance and an agreement not sue North Bay Village, plus a year's health insurance.
Norman Powell's agreement with the Village was terminated in February of 2019 in exchange for a payment of $85,000 not to sue North Bay Village. Powell is currently suing me.
Former Mayor Connie Leon Kreps left North Bay Village.
Former Commissioner Andreana Jackson, who may have known, resigned from the commission after the Commission on Ethics found she had profited from a village sponsored children's event.
Former Commissioners Laura Cattabriga and Jose Alvarez continue to lurk around North Bay Island asking questions.
By The Way, Kevin, Where The Hell Have You Been?
Last July, I left North Bay Village when I decided to retire. I am living in San Luis Obispo, California. San Luis Obispo, which may be the Spanish for "halfway between LA and San Francisco on the coast", is a lively coastal college town and it looks like the retirement destination. I'll always love North Bay Village but California has been calling for many years and it's looking good.
Kevin Vericker
January 26, 2022
Too awesome for words, but I'll try.
ReplyDeleteThis story gives me hope that sooner or later, corruptocrats get their just desserts. It also put a very big smile on my face for reasons I'm not at liberty to say. If I told you, I'd have to kill you, and I love you too much to let that happen. XOXOXO
Like always North Bay Village residents are left holding the wrong end of the stick! Hope you and Cato are doing well and enjoying retirement.
ReplyDelete