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DA will not charge 4 Overland Park police officers for allegedly misusing charity funds

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Johnson County District Attorney Steve Howe will not charge four Overland Park police officers for alleged misconduct related to their activities connected to a police charity. 

The four officers — Sgt. Brandon Faber, Officer Brad Heater, Sgt. Rachel Scattergood and Sgt. Tim Tinnin — were placed on paid leave more than a year ago while Howe’s office investigated claims that they misused funds for the Overland Park Police Officers Foundation while serving as board members for the organization.

In a report issued Tuesday morning, Howe said he found that the officers under investigation “repeatedly disregarded the Foundation’s bylaws” but found that “a violation of bylaws does not necessarily equate to a violation of criminal laws.” 

“We’re not saying that the foundation board acted appropriately, but there’s a difference between acting appropriately and having criminal conduct,” Howe said Tuesday afternoon in a press conference following his office’s decision not to file charges. “We don’t like the result, we don’t like how the foundation conducted themselves.”

Late last month, the Overland Park Fraternal Order of Police pressed the DA’s office to make a decision on whether or not to charge the officers following the lengthy investigation.

The local FOP lodge suspended the Foundation’s operations last year after it flagged concerns about the foundation’s former leadership’s disbursement of funds.

The charity was supposed to help families of fallen officers

Charity Navigator gave the police charity a score of 14% and a zero-star rating for IRS filing year 2016 and recommended potential donors “proceed with caution” when giving to the foundation.  

The foundation was meant to “to assist law enforcement officers and their families in financial distress following catastrophic injury or death,” according to federal tax documents filed on behalf of the charity that same year.

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That document also says the organization will use the charity to support “charitable outreach to the community” and “educational opportunities.” 

Tinnin, Faber, Heater and Scattergood are all listed as officers for the foundation on tax forms filed between 2016 and 2020.

“They violated the public’s trust,” Howe said Tuesday, noting their documented use of foundation funds for purposes other than those initially outlined in the organization’s bylaws.

He estimated that roughly $15,500 was given to the foundation’s leadership while they were serving as board members.

Johnson County District Attorney Steve Howe said there was not evidence of criminal misconduct in the investigation into misuse of the Overland Park police charity funds.
Johnson County District Attorney Steve Howe. Photo credit Kaylie McLaughlin.

Officer Mike Mosher, who was killed in the line of duty in 2020, was also a founding board member of the charity and listed as the director and president in 2016. Howe said the Mosher family also received money from the foundation following his death, but did not specify what amount. 

In 2022, new leadership took over the foundation, discovering no records of meetings and no business records, according to the district attorney’s report.

The foundation’s bylaws ordered such documents to be kept. There was also no annual audit, which was also required by the foundation’s rules, as well.

The foundation’s new leadership hired a forensic accountant to conduct an audit, the DA’s report says, which was ultimately handed over to Howe’s office. 

Officer’s employment with OPPD uncertain

As of Tuesday, the four officers remain on paid leave.

The city of Overland Park’s Communications Manager Meg Ralph, in an emailed statement Tuesday, said “the city is awaiting the district attorney’s investigation materials to determine whether any violations of City policy occurred.”

She said the city’s investigation would occur “expediently.” 

The Overland Park Fraternal Order of Police and the Overland Park Police Officers Foundation are both separate from the city’s police department.

Attorney General is also investigating the officers

During a press conference on Tuesday and in the report issued earlier in the day, Howe outlined his belief that the former board members had “civil liability.”

He said the Kansas Attorney General’s Office is investigating the officers under the Kansas Charitable Organizations and Solicitations Act.

Howe said Tuesday his office intends to cooperate with that investigation into what he views as “pretty obvious violations of that act.”

Below is a full copy of the district attorney’s report.

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Looking back: 4 Overland Park officers on leave amid investigation into spending at police charity

About the author

Kaylie McLaughlin
Kaylie McLaughlin

👋 Hi! I’m Kaylie McLaughlin, and I cover Overland Park and Olathe for the Johnson County Post.

I grew up in Shawnee and graduated from Mill Valley in 2017. I attended Kansas State University, graduating with a bachelor’s degree in journalism in 2021. While there, I worked for the K-State Collegian, serving as the editor-in-chief. As a student, I interned for the Wichita Eagle, the Shawnee Mission Post and KSNT in Topeka. I also contributed to the KLC Journal and the Kansas Reflector. Before joining the Post in 2023 as a full-time reporter, I worked for the Olathe Reporter.

Have a story idea or a comment about our coverage you’d like to share? Email me at kaylie@johnsoncountypost.com.

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