July 9, 2009
LANSING
-Attorney General
Mike Cox today announced the filing of a civil suit on behalf of the Michigan
Emergency Financial Assistance Loan Board (ELB) to recover $264,000 in
unauthorized payments Arthur Blackwell II made to himself when he served as the
City of Highland Park's Emergency Financial Manager.
"Public officials are entrusted
to serve their community, not take advantage of it," said Cox. "But in this
case, the public trust was completely violated."
The suit alleges that from April
2008 to December 2008, Blackwell, without approval of the ELB, made $308,000 in
unauthorized payments to himself from the City of
Highland Park. Blackwell later repaid $44,000. However, despite
demands from the ELB to return the remaining funds, Blackwell has failed to do
so.
In seeking a return of the
$264,000, the civil law suit contains four counts against Blackwell, including:
breach of contract for not seeking approval before paying himself; violation of
statutory conversion law for making payments to himself, under which the state
seeks a judgment of three times the amount found by the jury? up to $792,000;
committing common law conversion for converting funds to personal use; and,
breach of fiduciary duty for making unauthorized payments to himself. Funds
would be returned to the City of Highland Park.
The suit was filed in the Wayne County Circuit Court. The
Attorney General's office is currently seeking to serve Blackwell with the law
suit.
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