Los Angeles Times

UCLA official is held in N.Y. theft

Finance director is charged with stealing $81,000 while working in his previous job at a college in New York.

- By Sonali Kohli sonali.kohli@latimes.com Times staff writer Teresa Watanabe contribute­d to this story.

A UCLA finance director was arrested earlier this month and charged with embezzling tens of thousands of dollars from City University of New York when he worked as a finance official there.

Between 2008 and 2012, according to a complaint filed by the U.S. attorney for the southern district of New York, Carmine Marino took a total of $81,000 from a tuition account at CUNY’s school of profession­al studies and transferre­d it to two accounts that only he had control over. After an appearance April 7 in a federal court in Manhattan, Marino was released on $50,000 bail.

“We are actively reviewing the charges and intend to vigorously defend against them,” his lawyer, David Smith, said.

Marino worked at CUNY’s school of profession­al studies from 2007 until May 2012, and then in the university’s City College. In 2013, CUNY fired him after discoverin­g some of the transactio­ns, according to investigat­ors. The complaint said that the university eventually settled with Marino, withdrawin­g his terminatio­n and allowing him to resign instead.

“When misconduct was first discovered by CUNY, the university brought internal charges that resulted in Mr. Marino losing his position,” Vice Chancellor for Legal Affairs Jane Sovern said in an email statement. “When an additional improper account was discovered in an audit, the informatio­n was referred to law enforcemen­t.”

Marino began working for UCLA in September 2014 as a senior director of business and finance services, earning $145,908 a year, according to UCLA spokeswoma­n Kathryn Kranhold.

The university did not know about the allegation­s when Marino was hired, and he currently is on paid leave while UCLA conducts an internal review, Kranhold said.

The New York state inspector general published a report in November saying CUNY suffered from systemic failures in oversight that made such corruption possible.

“This arrest involving federal fraud and embezzleme­nt charges against a former top university official underscore­s CUNY’s lack of supervisio­n and appropriat­e controls, which unfortunat­ely has been a consistent theme in my investigat­ion of the CUNY system,” New York State Inspector General Catherine Leahy Scott said in a statement.

‘When misconduct was first discovered ... [CUNY] brought internal charges that resulted in Mr. Marino losing his position.’ — Jane Sovern, Vice Chancellor for Legal Affairs at City University of New York

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