September 25, 2012
Putnam woman gets 6 years for embezzling
Former office manager skimmed $380,000 from law firm
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- A Putnam County woman who admitted last month to stealing $380,000 from the Charleston law firm where she worked and using the money to pay for vacations, shopping sprees and concert tickets will spend at least six years in prison.

On Tuesday, Kanawha Circuit Judge Duke Bloom sentenced Terri Kay Workman, 44, of Eleanor, on six counts of embezzlement, inciting an outcry from the dozens of family, friends and members of Workman's church congregation that attended the hearing.

One woman, believed to be Workman's mother, collapsed to the floor when the judge issued his decision and had to be helped into the hallway and out of the courthouse.

Members of the family were too preoccupied to comment for this story. Workman's lawyer, M. Rosalee Juba-Plumley, did not immediately return a phone call placed Tuesday afternoon.

Workman, a former office manager for Bucci Bailey and Javins, admitted that she wrote checks to herself almost every month for seven years for amounts ranging from $800 to $1,200 and racked up more than $60,000 in debt on the firm's credit cards, according to Kanawha County assistant prosecutor Fred Giggenbach. On one occasion, Workman went on a family cruise to Mexico on the firm's dime, Giggenbach said.

"This was not a need thing, this was a greed thing," he said.

Workman made $40,000 a year as office manager. Firm partner Tim Bailey said Workman was the second-highest-paid staffer.

"There was never any information given to us that there were any problems financially -- that she couldn't make it or that she was in dire need," Bailey said Tuesday. "It wasn't like I had someone who was an entry-level staffer that because of change in personal circumstances was finding it difficult to make it."

Workman was fired after a dip in job performance, Bailey said. After she left the firm, the new office manager noticed that huge chunks of cash were missing and that credit card statements were being mailed to her house.

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Copyright 2012 The Charleston Gazette. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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