News
September 7, 2008
No one sounded alarm as publicly funded venture lost millions
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. - In October 2002, West Virginia's Development Office awarded a $600,000 grant to Sequelle Communications Alliance Inc. as part of a multimillion-dollar project to improve broadband Internet access to the largely rural mid-Ohio Valley region.

Six years later, Heidi Laughery, Sequelle's former president and CEO, is under federal indictment, accused of misappropriating more than $2.4 million in government funds. The project fell apart without accomplishing its goals, including the promise to bring 45 high-paying jobs to the area.

The indictment maintains that Laughery and her co-defendants - James Larry Hymer, R. Scott Truslow and MentorGen LLC - conspired to use the public funds to launch a separate business venture in 2004.

But that doesn't explain how an endeavor with so much government involvement and public funds - including the state grant and loans of $3.295 million from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and $160,000 from the Mid-Ohio Valley Regional Council - was allowed to founder without any alarms being sounded.

Quarterly updates were required as part of the state Development Office grant, which was awarded through the Wood County Commission and the Mid-Ohio Valley Regional Council.

Although the grant application specified that 17 employees would be hired by the end of the first year, the quarterly reports show that Sequelle did not hire its second employee until the final quarter of 2003.

By the end of the first year, Sequelle had five employees. Six months later, just three more had been added.

"The equipment has not yet been procured. Once equipment is in place, job creation projections should be on schedule," the third report, dated July 7, 2003, states.

Of the six reports in the Development Office's files, that is the only one with any kind of comment in the "narrative" section.

No staff ever conducted an on-site visit, the reports state. No Sequelle employees were ever listed as having been interviewed.

None of the reports have any indication, such as a signature in the "reviewed by" section, that any Development Office personnel ever examined them.

"I don't know why [a Development Office employee] didn't sign them," said Bobby Lewis, the agency's director of community development.

Lewis said he believed the reports were reviewed, despite the lack of signatures. He said the employee who supervised the Sequelle project is no longer with the WVDO.

"[Those] report[s] should have been signed. It never came to my attention that [they weren't] signed," he said. "That kind of record keeping without signatures just wouldn't happen today."

James Mylott, executive director of the Mid-Ohio Valley Regional Council, declined to comment on his agency's role in monitoring the project's progress before hanging up on the reporter.

"I understand from the assistant U.S. attorney that I will probably be a witness in this case, and I was advised to be very circumspect," he said. "That's about all I can say."

Mountain State College President A. Michael McPeek, who was Sequelle's board chairman, did not return repeated calls for this story.

Broadband project

launched to fanfare

Sequelle Inc., a Marietta, Ohio-based nonprofit group, incorporated in August 2000. Its purpose was "the implementation and operation of a wide wireless broadband network for Washington County, Ohio, and surrounding areas in order to advance and promote industrial, economic, commercial and civic development."

In September 2001, Sequelle Communications Alliance Inc. incorporated as a for-profit company in West Virginia. The following year, the company secured a $3.295 million loan from the USDA's Rural Utilities Service for its broadband project, with its network operations center to be located in Wood County.

From the outset, local politicians supported the project.

In March 2002, Rep. Alan B. Mollohan, D-W.Va., and then-Rep. Ted Strickland, D-Ohio, jointly announced the federal loan.

"I am very pleased that Sequelle's hard work and devotion to bridging the digital divide within this regional rural area has already begun to pay off," Strickland, now Ohio's governor, said at the time. "[T]his loan will allow Sequelle to make high-speed broadband access more available in our part of Ohio and neighboring areas in West Virginia."

In a 2002 news release, then-Gov. Bob Wise touted Sequelle's promise to bring as many as 50 jobs with annual salaries of at least $45,000.

"West Virginia will be at the forefront of wireless technology, lending support to a type of communications remarkably suited to the state's rural nature," Wise said. "A vibrant, reliable digital network will attract the kinds of companies West Virginia wants."

Laughery, who had joined Sequelle in September 2001, is quoted in the same release.

"It is exciting to create a dynamic communications system in this region," Laughery said. "It provides a critical tool for sustained community and economic growth."

A criminal history

and a bankruptcy

According to the indictment, Laughery, 46, was hiding something from the agencies that were funding Sequelle's broadband project.

In 1987, while known as Heidi Ditchendorf, she pleaded guilty in federal court to embezzling more than $133,000 from clients' accounts when she worked for Merrill Lynch in San Francisco. One of the clients was her roommate, professional tennis player Heather Ludloff.

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Posted By: I always wondered (2:46pm 09-08-2008)
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I remember the stories in the paper when Wise announced the jobs. Working in the IT field, I was excited by the news. I waited and waited to hear news about job postings for this company...but never saw any. Eventually, I just forgot about it. I am glad that the reporter followed up on this.

Posted By: TO: wv all the way (9:34am 09-08-2008)
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WV didn't really get the $600,000 back. The money was used to purchase computer equipment. The state may have the equipment back, but given the time that has elapsed...the equipment is obsolete and much if it is certainly useless.

Posted By: Steve from Sissonville (8:27am 09-08-2008)
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I pretty much agree with DTO. The development office, while it's had it's successes, has also made some awful investments. There simply is no excuse for Laughery's past not to have been checked out before taxpayer money was put on the line.
I have long advocated that the current method of business development investments be changed to a tax rebate plan based on employee pay and benefits. Employers that pay their state resident employees wages and benefits exceeding industry standards per job classification, including decent, employer funded health insurance and an employer funded retirement package with benefits of at least 1.5 times Social Security after 30 years of service, should be rebated from one third to 75% of the state income taxes that the employees pay. The beauty of this system is that the rebates are made AFTER the state has realized the benefit of getting and keeping jobs instead of the crap shoot we now have.

Posted By: DTO (8:41pm 09-07-2008)
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The West Virginia "Development Office" needs to be shut down. It is nothing more than a means for rich politicians to play monopoly with the taxpayers' money, usually by giving it to businesses that contribute to their campaigns.

This is NOT what happens with deregulation; this is what happens when the government tries to do the job of the free market. If you have a startup company and good idea, there are plenty of banks who will give you a loan. The very fact that you need a government handout is proof that your business isn't going to work.

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