Tuesday, March 30, 2004

Jack and Jail?

David Aikman may get his wish to visit Jack Kelley in the pokey after all.

[USA Today] also described questionable payments. For instance, a Pakistani translator denied receiving $3,450 for services that Kelley put on an expense report.

"Anytime you have suspicion of a fraudulent invoice, you can make an argument for law enforcement interest," said Jacob Frenkel, a former prosecutor now in private practice in Washington, adding that "ethical breaches" don't usually rise to criminal conduct.

The Apostles used to pull that exact scam in the old days.

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