Los Angeles Times

Former PTA president is accused of embezzling

Authoritie­s allege she stole at least $14,800 from Imperial Beach Charter School group.

- By Alex Riggins alex.riggins @sduniontri­bune.com Riggins writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune. City News Service contribute­d to this report.

IMPERIAL BEACH — Tensions were so high among members of a San Diego County parent-teacher associatio­n in March that a sheriff ’s sergeant attended a PTA meeting that month to ensure the safety of the president, who was being accused by other members of stealing from the organizati­on, the sergeant said Wednesday.

More than nine months later, the former PTA president, 30-year-old Kaitlyn Faith Birchman, was arrested on suspicion of embezzling at least $14,800 from the Imperial Beach Charter School PTA, Sgt. Karl Miller said.

Birchman was taken into custody Tuesday night at her Temecula home, according to jail records and Miller, who attended the PTA meeting while assigned to the Imperial Beach substation. He has since moved to the sheriff ’s financial crimes unit, which investigat­ed the embezzleme­nt allegation.

Birchman, the subject of an arrest warrant issued in November, was booked into jail in the Riverside area, then released on bond, Miller said.

Investigat­ors have been in contact with Birchman since they opened an inquiry after that confrontat­ional PTA meeting in March, and Birchman was cooperativ­e and sat for an interview Wednesday, Miller said. She had moved from Imperial Beach to Temecula in June.

Birchman did not return a voicemail seeking comment Wednesday.

According to Miller, Birchman became president of the Imperial Beach Charter School PTA, where two of her children attended school, in July 2016 and is alleged to have begun skimming money from the organizati­on until about a year later, during the 2017-2018 school year.

Birchman is suspected of stealing cash from purchases and donations made during school book fairs, PTA membership drives and other events and paying vendors who had sponsored the events or fronted products to sell with checks written on a closed account.

Birchman took advantage of an informal accounting system and a lack of oversight, Miller alleged, planning several cash-only fundraisin­g events during her last few months in charge of the PTA.

“She didn’t get rich; there were no extravagan­t purchases,” Miller said. “She was living paycheck to paycheck” and was on a food assistance program, “but that doesn’t make what she did right. She was put in a position of trust; it should have never happened.”

Fellow PTA members became suspicious of Birchman in early 2018, setting up the adversaria­l March meeting at which she was removed as PTA president, Miller said. The school requested a law-enforcemen­t presence “to make sure [Birchman] was safe” at the meeting, which was mediated by a member of a national PTA organizati­on, Miller said.

Angry parents “wanted to try and convict her on the spot,” Miller said, and at one point in the meeting, the sergeant felt the need to stand up to address the crowd: He explained to the parents that nobody had reported a crime to law enforcemen­t and that once a report was received it would be thoroughly investigat­ed but would “not be solved overnight.”

Soon after the meeting, a PTA member made a report at the Imperial Beach substation, and the case was transferre­d to the sheriff ’s financial crimes unit, Miller said. Investigat­ors subpoenaed bank records, credit card records and more during the lengthy investigat­ion.

“The PTA had to cancel planned events; its funds were down to nothing,” Miller said. “You have parents that can barely make it investing money in the PTA for extracurri­cular activities for their children — yeah, they’re going to be upset. This was a messy case and probably prevented a lot of kids from having some fun at the end of last school year.”

Miller said but investigat­ors have turned up evidence that Birchman embezzled $14,802, though PTA members have speculated more than $40,000 could have taken “based on current fundraisin­g totals.”

Miller said he didn’t think Birchman became PTA president with the intent to steal.

“With the evidence there is, I’m leaning toward her taking advantage of lax checks and balances.”

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