Former Oklahoma DHS worker charged with wire fraud
A retired DHS worker, Katharine A. Daugherty, has been charged in Oklahoma City federal court with wire fraud. Her attorney, Irven Box, said she has accepted responsibility for her actions and intends to plead guilty to the felony charge. A hearing is set for Wednesday.
A DHS worker kept hidden from the federal government that a disabled adult had died so she could get his monthly benefits checks and use the funds “for her personal benefit,” prosecutors allege.

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Katharine A. Daugherty, 57, of Bethany, is charged in Oklahoma City federal court with wire fraud.
Because of the scheme, the U.S. Labor Department was cheated out of more than $27,000, prosecutors allege.
Daugherty retired from the Oklahoma Department of Human Services in August 2011 after learning she was under investigation. She was an adult protective services specialist IV.
Her attorney, Irven Box, said she has accepted responsibility for her actions and intends to plead guilty to the felony charge. A hearing is set for Wednesday.
Daugherty oversaw the finances of a former Federal Aviation Administration worker who was injured on the job in 1976. A judge made DHS the man's guardian when he was admitted to a Bethany nursing home in April 2009.
Because of his injury, the man was entitled to federal monthly disability compensation benefits until death.
Prosecutors allege in the charge that Daugherty failed to notify the U.S. Labor Department when the man died March 13, 2010. Instead, according to the charge, she forged his signature a month after his death on a benefits eligibility statement and then falsely represented to the Labor Department that he “was still living in a nursing home.”
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