Baltimore Sun

Report: Baltimore County employee misuses, steals government trucks

- By Tony Roberts

A Baltimore County Department of Public Works employee allegedly stole two government pickup trucks and used a dump truck for personal reasons from December 2021 to July 2023, according to a report from the county inspector general’s office.

Baltimore County Inspector General Kelly Madigan’s investigat­ion found that the county lost an estimated $938.72 in unnecessar­y fuel costs and $1,028.02 in labor.

Her office has asked the Bureau of Highways, which is within the Department of Public Works, to create a vehicle usage policy that employees must sign before given access to county vehicles. The office also recommends that all crew chiefs in the Bureau of Highways be given access to NexTraq, a program used by the county to track the speeds and locations of its vehicles.

The inspector general’s investigat­ion began in August, when the office received a complaint that a county employee had stolen two white 2017 Ford F-250 tailgate trucks.

The Bureau of Highways employee, a 36-yearold Westminste­r man, stole the vehicles from highway shop #3, an office for crew members located in Glyndon, according to the inspector general’s November report.

After stealing the vehicles, the suspect, along with a former employee of the highway shop, tried to sell them on multiple websites such as Facebook and Offer Up, according to charging documents. Officers found pictures of the vehicles online under accounts held by the employee and former employee. The Baltimore County State’s Attorney’s Office is handling the theft allegation as a criminal matter.

Through employee interviews and records reviews, the inspector general’s office also found that from December 2021 to July 2023, the employee used his assigned dump truck 47 times for personal reasons.

The employee frequently drove the assigned dump truck to his home or locations nearby, where it was parked for anywhere from 5 minutes to 3 hours and 49 minutes, causing unnecessar­y use of fuel and attendance fraud, the report found.

Crew members are often assigned to drive around to remove snow and debris from roads, fill potholes and clear storm drains.

But the employee would use the dump truck to haul personal debris from his residence, according to the report.

In November 2022, a crew chief spoke to the employee regarding leaving an assignment without permission, the inspector general’s office says.

However, the crew chief admittedly gave permission for the employee to take the dump truck home during the workday on a few occasions for specific reasons, such as to retrieve medication, according to the report. The crew chief did not give permission to drive home for lunch with his family or spend time with his child.

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