Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)
Office manager charged with theft of $24K from church
WHITEMARSH » A Conshohocken businesswoman who brought print back to the borough with a monthly “good news” newspaper and website is facing theft and related charges for allegedly financing her publication, in part, with unauthorized funds from the credit account of a Lafayette Hill church.
Police say Teresa Parris, 49, used a credit card belonging to St. Peter’s Lutheran Church, where she worked as an office manager, to pay for the printing of the Conshy Courier over a seven-month period.
According to the criminal complaint, an investigation began when church officials contacted police after conducting an audit earlier this year.
The audit allegedly revealed 11 unauthorized transactions totaling nearly $24,000 made by Parris between August 2016 and March 2017.
Ten of those transactions were payments to the printer and publishing company that published the Conshy Courier at the time. The other transaction was allegedly a payment to Parris’ cell phone service provider.
On April 3, a detective with the Whitemarsh Police Department interviewed Parris about the audit’s findings and she reportedly admitted to making the unauthorized purchases, according to the affidavit of probable cause.
Court records show she was released on her own recognizance after a criminal complaint was filed May 3.
In addition to publishing the Conshy Courier, Parris, a native of the Caribbean island of Nevis, is the proprietor of a mobile notary and won an election to become a Pennsylvania State Constable for Conshohocken Ward 2 in 2016. She is also a member of the Conshohocken Plymouth Whitemarsh Rotary Club and a board member of the Norristown Chamber of Commerce.
Parris and St. Peter’s officials declined to comment for this story.