San Francisco Chronicle

Ex-AC Transit finance chief convicted of embezzleme­nt

- By Sarah Ravani

The former chief financial officer of AC Transit was convicted of embezzling more than $500,000 from nonprofit groups affiliated with a prominent Oakland church.

Lewis Clinton was convicted Tuesday by an Alameda County Superior Court jury on seven charges, including grand theft, money laundering and tax evasion.

During a three-week trial, prosecutor­s said the 60-year-old Clinton stole $590,000 from the Allen Temple Baptist Church in East Oakland from 2007 to 2013, while he was the CFO of AC Transit.

Clinton spent the pilfered money on house loans, travel, car expenses, his children’s private school tuition, a golf club membership and other personal expenditur­es, according to prosecutor­s.

After the jury announced its verdict, Judge Scott Patton ordered that Clinton be immediatel­y taken into custody and held without bail at the Santa Rita Jail in Dublin.

He had been out on $100,000 bail after being arrested and charged in April 2014.

He’s scheduled to be sentenced Sept. 8 at the Fremont Hall of Justice.

The Vallejo resident retired from the transit agency in November 2014 after being its CFO since 2008, earning $285,000 a year. He was also on the agency’s retirement board.

“Mr. Clinton was never accused of malfeasanc­e related to AC Transit and retired from our transit agency several years ago. During his tenure, Mr. Clinton was a key member of the AC Transit Staff,” Robert Lyles, a spokesman for AC Transit, said in a statement to The Chronicle.

Lyles declined to comment on the jury’s decision.

Clinton was a member of Allen Temple Baptist Church, which has about 5,000 congregant­s, and served as president of nonprofits associated with the church.

From 2007 to 2013, he served as board president of two of the church’s organizati­ons that were set up to offer housing and services to low- and moderatein­come people in Oakland. Additional­ly, he ran the church’s foundation to accept philanthro­pic gifts.

Prosecutor­s determined that Clinton used his position to steal funds from the nonprofit groups.

Clinton’s embezzleme­nt was discovered in December 2012 when a bookkeeper raised suspicions over ATM withdrawal­s from a Wells Fargo bank account. An investigat­ion began three months later when board members found they were short of housing funds.

 ??  ?? Lewis Clinton stole $590,000 from nonprofit groups.
Lewis Clinton stole $590,000 from nonprofit groups.

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