Dayton Daily News

Here’s why fired worker’s business was linked to city

Aspyre number listed as contact informatio­n by software provider.

- By Josh Sweigart and Lynn Hulsey Staff Writers

Dayton officials say there was an explanatio­n for why a now-fired city employee’s company showed up in a city list of minority contractor­s using a phone number that rang to his city office.

RoShawn Winburn was fired from the city’s Human Relations Council department on May 3 after he was indicted on federal corruption charges. He is accused of taking bribes in exchange for leaking informatio­n to contractor­s and not fully reviewing the eligibilit­y of disadvanta­ged, minorityan­d woman-owned businesses. He has pleaded not guilty and is awaiting trial.

The day before Winburn was fired, the Dayton Daily News discovered that Winburn’s private company, Aspyre Advisors LLC, was on a city-maintained list of certified disadvanta­ged businesses. The phone number list for Aspyre was that of the Human Relations Council.

continued from B1

The city removed Aspyre from its list when the Dayton Daily News asked about it and provided no immediate explanatio­n for why the phone number rang to city offices. City officials said Aspyre did no work for the city during the time Winburn was a Dayton employee and employees aren’t permitted to take calls for a third party.

Winburn’s company was certified to the city of Dayton’s Procuremen­t Enhancemen­t Program in 2007, before Winburn was hired in 2014, according to HRC Executive Director Erica Fields, who provided additional details about Aspyre for the first time in a recent interview.

That certificat­ion had expired when Winburn gave the administra­tor of a thirdparty software permission to log in as Aspyre to figure out why vendors were having problems updating their informatio­n in the system, Fields said.

The HRC phone number was listed as contact informatio­n for Aspyre by the administra­tor of the software called CityBOTS during that test.

CityBOTS is a third-party software the city uses to manage the procuremen­t certificat­ion list and other records. The city pays the Texas-based company Hervey Inc. an annual licensing fee for the software, which was $28,500 this year, according to city records.

Officials with Hervey Inc. did not respond to emails seeking comment.

City officials have said they no longer have records of Aspyre’s involvemen­t in the program because they are not required to keep records that far back.

Winburn is one of four Dayton men indicted in what prosecutor­s have described as an ongoing investigat­ion into corruption in area politics. He also served as a Huber Heights city council member.

Winburn did not return a message seeking comment left on the listed phone number on the Aspyre website. His attorney also did not return a phone call.

Aspyre’s website says it is a wealth management firm. The only employee listed on the site is Winburn. Aspyre was incorporat­ed in 2008 as Monument Capital Advisors, then Winburn became its CEO and changed its name to Aspyre in 2010, according to records filed with the Ohio Secretary of State.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States