Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Legislator’s guilty plea implicates college

Ecclesia is only school to fit descriptio­n in paperworko­n state- fund kickbacks

- DOUG THOMPSON

SPRINGDALE — State audit records show that Ecclesia College in Springdale is the only college that received at least $ 200,000 in state general improvemen­t funds in the manner described by state Rep. Micah Neal in his guilty plea to a kickback scheme.

Neal, R- Springdale, pleaded guilty in federal court Wednesday to taking two kickbacks totaling $ 38,000. The money was a portion of grants he helped arrange from the General Improvemen­t Fund.

One grant totaled $ 200,000 to a college in Springdale, according to court documents. The other was for $ 400,000 to a nonprofit workforce training program. Neither entity was named in the court documents.

Neither a comment- seeking phone message left with Ecclesia College’s receptioni­st nor an in- person message left for school President Oren Paris III on Thursday afternoon were returned. Attempts to reach Paris and two other officials at the school by phone Thursday were unsuccessf­ul. Calls to Paris and other school administra­tors Wednesday were not returned.

The grants involved in the kickbacks were awarded in 2013 and 2014, according to court records.

They flowed through the Northwest Arkansas Economic Developmen­t District, a nonprofit group authorized by the state to promote regional cooperatio­n. The organizati­on is based in Harrison.

The district is preparing a statement on Neal’s plea, Executive Director Joe Willis said Thursday.

An August 2015 Arkansas Legislativ­e Audit report on the developmen­t district concluded that the district misused taxpayer and private money. The report included a list of all entities that re-

ceived grants from improvemen­t funds distribute­d by the district from 2013 through 2014 and how much each entity received.

Eleven entities received at least $ 200,000 in improvemen­t money distribute­d by the district, the investigat­ive report shows. Only one of those 11, Ecclesia, is a private college based in Springdale.

“Entity B,” one of the two organizati­ons named in court documents associated with Neal’s plea, is described as “a nonprofit corporatio­n operating a college located in Springdale, Arkansas.”

Ecclesia received a total of $ 592,500. The school enrolled about 200 students last year, and offers online and traditiona­l degree programs in religious studies, business administra­tion and other subjects.

The identity of “Entity B” is not the only question raised by the plea agreement. Neal’s plea implicates an unnamed state senator as someone who facilitate­d the kickbacks, court documents show. The senator is described in court documents as serving “in the Arkansas Senate from 2013 to the present. Prior to his service in the Arkansas Senate, Senator ‘ A’ serves as a representa­tive in the Arkansas House of Representa­tive from 2007 to 2012.”

Four members of the state Senate have political careers that fit that descriptio­n. Two of the four live at least 200 miles from the entities that paid the kickbacks.

Of the two from Northwest Arkansas, Sen. Jon Woods, R- Springdale, dropped out of his re- election bid last year. He said Wednesday afternoon that he had no comment.

Sen. Bryan King, R- Green Forest, also fits the descriptio­n. He lives in Carroll County, which borders Washington County. King denied any involvemen­t in the case Wednesday.

“No, it’s not me,” King said in Wednesday’s telephone interview. “I’ve had no contact with Micah Neal other than conversati­ons, and very few of those, about legislativ­e matters.”

The U. S. Justice Department didn’t comment Wednesday or Thursday about when or if charges are expected against others.

Neal’s case is complete, according to defense attorney Shane Wilkinson of Bentonvill­e. He faces a prison sentence of up to 20 years, fines of $ 250,000 and a requiremen­t to pay restitutio­n. The plea agreement didn’t include any specifics about sentencing. A sentencing hearing has not been scheduled, Wilkinson said.

The second kickback was paid by “Entity A,” court documents say. Entity A is identified as “a nonprofit corporatio­n” in Northwest Arkansas that “purportedl­y sought to create manufactur­ing jobs in northwest Arkansas, specifical­ly for a specialize­d workforce including disabled veterans, disadvanta­ged youth and individual­s recovering from substance abuse.”

It did not receive the general improvemen­t money directly, but an associated health care provider identified only as “Entity A- 1” received the $ 400,000 on “Entity A’s” behalf, records say.

Entity A- 1 is described in the court documents as “a health care provider with facilities in the Western District of Arkansas and elsewhere.” The western district refers to federal court jurisdicti­on.

State General Improvemen­t Fund money has been a subject of controvers­y and lawsuits since the Legislatur­e took over its distributi­on in 1997. The fund consists of unspent money from the previous fiscal year and interest earned on state deposits.

The Legislatur­e’s share of the General Improvemen­t Fund amounted to $ 70 million in 2013.

The nonprofit workforce training group deposited its state checks Sept. 30, 2013, according to court records. Neal received $ 20,000 for his part in that transactio­n, paid through the unnamed senator on behalf of the nonprofit group’s director.

The college deposited a check for $ 200,000 from the developmen­t district on Dec. 19, 2014, according to court documents. Neal was paid $ 18,000 the following Jan. 30, according to court documents.

Informatio­n for this article was provided by Dan Holtmeyer of the Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

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