At one center, a staffer even bolted out the door when confronted about using fake credentials, city Department of Investigations Commissioner Mark Peters, Brooklyn District Attorney Kenneth Thompson and Staten Island District Attorney Daniel Donovan said while announcing the probe Friday.
The centers' owners have pleaded not guilty to various charges involving false documents. These fabrications meant the city did not have a clear picture of the staff and operations at these sites and whether children were appropriately protected. Authorities don't believe any children were harmed as a result. Six centers have already been closed. A seventh is closing by year's end, to allow time to find other care for its children, and, in the meantime, is being closely monitored. Investigators have asked regulators to close the other two.
Together, the nine centers were
authorized to care for 400 children. All were privately owned, but
some got city Administration for Children's Services payments to care
for poor children. The agency said Friday it works actively to detect
and stop fraud. The owner of multiple Brooklyn centers all called
Next to Home got nearly $60,000 in ACS payments, even though one of
the centers never actually operated, authorities said. Inspectors
found the rat droppings, the spoiled milk and a broken fire-alarm
handle at another Next to Home location, Peters said.
Moreover, owner Owen Larman was an
admitted fraudster, having pleaded guilty to grand larceny in a
mortgage-fraud scheme in 2007, according to court records. He served
about three years in prison and was released in 2011. At the ABC
Little Star center in Brooklyn, a staffer with a phony criminal
background-check letter on file darted out the door when
investigators arrived, authorities are still working to determine
the person's true identity, but the flight At One of a Kind Child
Care on Staten Island, investigators were presented with clearance
letters — state documents certifying that teachers had no record of
child abuse — that quickly roused suspicion: They bore the names of
governors who were no longer in office.
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