Baltimore Sun

Fed judge releases former mayor

Pugh released early from probation in ‘Healthy Holly’ fraud conviction­s

- By Alex Mann

A federal judge on Thursday ordered that probation for former Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh, convicted of fraud charges for her “Healthy Holly” book scheme, be terminated early.

Pugh, 74, was Baltimore’s mayor from 2016 to 2019, when she resigned from office in a scandal.

In 2019, she pleaded guilty to federal conspiracy and tax evasion charges stemming from the self-dealing scheme involving the sale of “Healthy Holly” children’s books. A judge in 2020 sentenced her to three years in prison, followed by three years of supervised release.

Pugh left prison early in January 2022, when she was transferre­d from a federal correction­al facility in Alabama to the supervisio­n of a reentry management office in Maryland. She was scheduled to be supervised through March 2025.

Federal probation officers authored a memorandum, dated Tuesday, asking a judge to end Pugh’s supervisio­n early, writing that she was ahead of court-ordered restitutio­n payments and had complied with all applicable rules and regulation­s. “She is categorize­d as a person under supervisio­n with a low propensity for reoffendin­g and presents with no identified public safety risks,” probation officers Tracey Lewis and Marius Davis wrote. “She demonstrat­es the ability to lawfully self-manage beyond supervisio­n and receives adequate prosocial support to aid with this endeavor.”

U.S. District Judge Deborah K. Chasanow, who sentenced Pugh four years ago, signed the order terminatin­g her supervisio­n Thursday.

Pugh’s attorney, Andrew White, did not return a request for comment Thursday afternoon.

In the memorandum, the probation officers wrote that they told the Maryland U.S. Attorney’s Office, which prosecuted Pugh, about their plans to ask for early terminatio­n of her supervisio­n and that prosecutor­s did not object.

Pugh began her period of supervisio­n in April 2022, according to the memorandum. The conditions of her release included financial disclosure, no new credit or debt, mental health treatment and medication, cooperatio­n with the Internal Revenue Service and $411,948 in restitutio­n, to be paid at $100 a month, according to the memorandum.

“Since that time, she has maintained a stable residence in Baltimore City, and remained financiall­y capable of adhering to the court stipulated requiremen­ts of her restitutio­n payment schedule,” the probation officers wrote, adding that Pugh has repaid almost $64,000.

The former mayor’s return to Baltimore also has seen her make radio appearance­s and attend last year’s Preakness Stakes.

She secured a contract job with Morgan State University last May, according to the memorandum. Working as a “senior liaison,” Pugh conducts research for the university’s Center 4 Urban Violence Institute.

Pugh’s salary at Morgan, in addition to her Social Security income, has allowed her to pay $1,000 monthly toward restitutio­n, “far exceeding her monthly payment requiremen­t,” the officers wrote.

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