Ex-Detroit Public Schools official Barbara Byrd-Bennett gets prison

A former Detroit Public Schools official was sentenced to prison after earlier pleading guilty to receiving $2.3 million in kickbacks while steering $23 million in no-bid city of Chicago contracts to education firms.

A federal judge lamented the persistence of city corruption Friday as he sentencedĀ former head of Chicago Public Schools Barbara Byrd-Bennett to 4Ā½ years in prison. Byrd-Bennettā€™s brazenness in bilking a district buckling under major financial strain made her crime much worse, Judge Edmond Chang said at the sentencing hearing in U.S. District Court in Chicago.

ā–ŗRelated: Ā FBI: Former DPS official ‘fraudulently’ steered contract

A tearful Byrd-Bennett apologized in court before learning her punishment, saying: ā€œWhat I did was terribly wrong. ā€¦ Iā€™m ashamed and Iā€™m sorry.ā€

Byrd-Bennett was the chief academic and accountability officer for DPSĀ from May 2009 to June 2011.Ā A March 2013 FBI agent’s affidavit for a warrant to search Byrd-Bennett’s AOL e-mail account indicated there was “probable cause” to believe Byrd-Bennett committed fraud, theft and conspiracy while she worked at DPS.

Byrd-Bennett received particular scrutiny for a $40-million book deal to DPS, in which federal authorities suspected she lied to the district about her relationship with the book publisher, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, and had a conflict of interest. The book company deposited more than $25,000 in Byrd-Bennett’s money market account in July 2009, three weeks before the request for proposal for the Detroit schools book order.

Byrd-Bennett, now 67, and her co-schemers have further eroded public confidence in Chicago, a city with a long history of corruption, Chang said. It was vital to impose a punishment that can deter other officials tempted to accept bribes and kickbacks, he said.

ā€œItā€™s distressing that Chicago has not and seems to be unable to shed its image of public corruption,ā€ he said.

The scheme, Chang added, had diverted money from students who relied on education to help them escape poverty and crime.

He cited e-mails to co-defendants where Byrd-Bennett expressed an eagerness to make money, writing in one: ā€œI have tuition to pay and casinos to visit.ā€ Such ā€œcasualnessā€ and ā€œhumorā€ about corruption suggested she never thought sheā€™d be caught, the judge said.

 

Before being tapped to lead the Chicago district ā€” the nationā€™s third largest with 400,000, mostly low-income students ā€” Byrd-Bennett held top education jobs in Detroit, Cleveland and New York. As a young woman, she worked as a teacher in low-income neighborhoods in New York City near where she was raised, and later became a ā€œsuperstarā€ in the world of education reform, prosecutor Megan Church told the court earlier Friday.

But she succumbed to ā€œnaked greedā€ and a sense of entitlement as she took the Chicago post in 2012, Church said.

ā€œShe thought she was owed something more for what she did in the past,ā€ Church said. ā€œAnd Chicago was the place to get it.ā€

Bennett faced a maximum 20 years behind bars. Prosecutors asked for 7Ā½ years, in part because she had agreed to cooperate shortly after her arrest. The defense asked for a 3Ā½-year sentence.

Chang said he also factored in Byrd-Bennettā€™s age and how she had revitalized schools in different cities over her 40-year career. And he noted what he described as her quiet acts of kindness, including helping to pay for the funerals of some students.

Co-defendantsĀ SUPES Academy and Synesi Associates owners Gary Solomon and Thomas Vranas, also pleaded guilty to related charges. Chang sentenced Solomon to seven years in prison last month; Vranas received an 18-month sentence earlier Friday.

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel hired Byrd-Bennett five years ago, vowing to revitalize a school district criticized for low student performance. As CEO, Byrd-Bennett oversaw the shuttering of dozens of schools in a money-saving measure.

Byrd-Bennett said in court Friday that she had become overwhelmed as the head of CPS, recalling how parents yelled at her for closing their neighborhood schools and accused her of putting their kids in peril by forcing them to walk to new schools farther away.

When scrutiny of district contracts grew in 2013, Byrd-Bennett began deleting potentially incriminating e-mails, according to prosecutors. She resigned in June 2015, as word spread of an investigation.

In exchange for pleading guilty to one count of wire fraud in 2015, prosecutors agreed to drop 19 other counts of fraud charged in the original indictment.

Staff writers Keith Matheny andĀ Ann Zaniewski contributed to this report.

Source freep.com

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