San Diego Union-Tribune

FAVRE REPAYS $600K, OWES INTEREST

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Retired NFL player Brett Favre has repaid $600,000 in state welfare money he accepted for speeches where he didn’t appear, but the state attorney general could sue Favre if he doesn’t pay interest owed on the amount, the Mississipp­i auditor said Wednesday.

Auditor Shad White said Favre paid the $600,000 to the auditor’s office this week. White sent the former Green Bay Packers quarterbac­k a letter Oct. 12 demanding $828,000, which was the $600,000 plus $228,000 in interest.

Of the $228,000, White said: “If he does not pay that within 30 days of our demand, the AG will be responsibl­e for enforcing the payment of the interest in court.”

Favre is not facing criminal charges, but former Mississipp­i Department of Human Services Director John Davis and other people have been charged in one of the state’s largest embezzleme­nt cases. Allegation­s of misspendin­g came to light in early 2020 when Davis and five others were indicted.

White said in May 2020 that Favre, who lives in Mississipp­i, had repaid $500,000 of the $1.1 million in welfare money he received for multiple no-show speeches. Favre was paid by Mississipp­i Community Education Center, a nonprofit group whose former leader is among those awaiting trial.

In a Facebook post when he repaid the first $500,000, Favre said he didn’t know the money he received came from welfare funds. He also said his charity had provided millions of dollars to poor children in Mississipp­i and Wisconsin.

White on Oct. 12 demanded that several people and organizati­ons repay $77 million in misspent welfare money intended to help people in one of the poorest states in the nation. With interest, the demand jumped to $96 million. That included money sought from Favre.

White issued the demands about two weeks after a Maryland-based CPA firm issued an independen­t report about how the Mississipp­i Department of Human Services spent federal money from 2016 through 2019 through Temporary Assistance to Needy Families. The report found nearly $41 million in “questioned costs” for items including travel and programs to support college athletes.

White demanded the whole $96 million from Davis and most of it from Mississipp­i Community Education Center and another nonprofit organizati­on, Family Resource Center. Davis left the Department of Human Services in July 2019.

Those indicted along with Davis were former profession­al wrestler Brett DiBiase; former Department of Human Services employee Latimer Smith; Nancy New, who has been the director of Mississipp­i Community Education Center and New Learning Resources; her son Zach New, who has been assistant executive director of the education center; and Anne McGrew, an accountant for the education center.

DiBiase pleaded guilty in December to one count of making a false statement. He said in court documents that he had submitted documents and received full payment for work he did not complete. He agreed to pay $48,000 in restitutio­n, and his sentencing was deferred.

McGrew pleaded guilty on Oct. 11 to one charge of conspiracy to commit embezzleme­nt for her role in the case. She awaits sentencing and has agreed to testify against others.

Davis, Smith, Nancy New and Zach New have all pleaded not guilty and await trial in state court.

Nancy New and Zach New also have been indicted on federal charges, have pleaded not guilty and await trial.

Mississipp­i Community Education Center, operating as Families First for Mississipp­i, received more than $44 million in government grants from mid-2014 to mid-2018, according to nonprofit tax filings. Amounts spiked to $12.9 million and $26.7 million in the final two years, as Davis outsourced a large portion of Mississipp­i’s Temporary Assistance to Needy Families spending to the group.

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