Former KUMC employee sentenced to prison for embezzlement

Michael Tae Kim Ahlers, 50, of Lenexa, Kansas, was sentenced to two years in prison after stealing more than $556,000 from his former employer, the University of Kansas Medical Center (KUMC), as well as from KUMC Research Institute and from KU Endowment, according to a news release from the U.S. attorney’s office.

In February, Ahlers pleaded guilty to charges of bank fraud and filing a false tax return. The prison sentence will be followed by three years of supervised release, and Ahlers was ordered to pay more than $680,000 in restitution.

According to court documents, from 2009 to August 2015, Ahlers embezzled funds while he was the administrative officer of the KUMC Occupational Therapy Education Department. While embezzling $526,000 from KUMC, he spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on personal expenditures, according to documents. Some of those expenditures include:

• approximately $87,000 on gambling;
• approximately $81,000 on travel to locations such as Las Vegas, New Orleans, New York, Myrtle Beach and Caribbean cruises;
• approximately $81,000 in cash withdrawals;
• approximately $36,000 on golf memberships and fees; and
• approximately $36,000 on sports tickets and on license or donor fees.

To conceal the fraud, Ahlers used a KUMC Credit Union bank account over which he had exclusive control. He created fraudulent invoices to prevent the discovery that he was using the account for his personal gain, according to documents.

Ahlers stole approximately $30,000 from KUMC Research Institute and KU Endowment by submitting falsified invoices for which he was paid. He then willfully failed to include the stolen funds on his federal tax returns which resulted in a tax loss of more than $104,000 from 2009 to 2015.

“It’s disappointing anytime someone in a position of trust misuses that authority for personal financial gain. As federal prosecutors, we work tirelessly to see perpetrators of fraud brought to justice and convicted,” acting U.S. Attorney Duston Slinkard said in a news release. “It’s also our responsibility to advocate before the courts on behalf of victims so that they might recover as much of their losses as possible as restitution.”

The Kansas Bureau of Investigation, the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation, and the U.S. Secret Service investigated the case.

“After multiple years of embezzling from the University of Kansas Medical Center and spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on himself, Mr. Ahlers is now going to federal prison,” said Amanda Prestegard, acting special agent in charge of the IRS Criminal Investigation division in the St. Louis Field Office. “Mr. Ahlers’ sentence further exhibits that IRS CI, along with our law enforcement partners and the U.S. Attorney’s Office, will continue to identify, investigate and prosecute individuals that participate in abusive criminal activity, and are duty bound to protect the integrity of the U.S. tax administration.”

Assistant U.S. Attorney Ryan J. Huschka and former Assistant U.S. Attorney Leon Patton prosecuted the case.

Wyandotte County man’s estate to be compensated for wrongful conviction

The attorney general’s office has resolved a fifth lawsuit filed under the state’s mistaken-conviction statute, Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt said today.

The attorney general reached an agreed resolution of a lawsuit filed Nov. 13, 2020, by Olin L. “Pete” Coones.

In December 2009, Coones was convicted in Wyandotte County District Court and imprisoned for the first-degree murder of a Wyandotte County woman. His conviction was vacated and charges against him dismissed on Nov. 5, 2020.

After being released from prison, Coones died on Feb. 21, 2021, and his claim was continued by his estate. The agreed resolution was approved today in Shawnee County District Court by Judge Teresa L. Watson.

In the agreed order, the court determined that Coones did not commit the crime for which he was convicted, nor was he an accessory or accomplice to that crime, nor did he suborn perjury, fabricate evidence or cause or bring about his conviction through his own conduct. Coones served 12 years and 213 days in prison or jail.

The court ordered the following relief for Coones, as provided by the mistaken-conviction statute:

• Coones was granted a certificate of innocence.
• Records of his conviction and arrest were ordered expunged.
• Coones’ estate was granted total compensation of $826,301.81.

By law, payment of the judgment entered today is subject to review by the State Finance Council. Schmidt plans to formally ask the Finance Council to review the matter at its next meeting.

From December 2018 through the present, 11 individuals have filed lawsuits against the state of Kansas under authority of the K.S.A. 60-5004, the mistaken-conviction statute. Of those, five have reached judgment and payment has been made or is in process. In a sixth case, the district court ruled against the claimant, and the Kansas Supreme Court affirmed that no payment was owed. The other five cases remain in litigation in district courts.

Copies of the orders In the matter of the wrongful conviction of Olin “Pete” Coones, Shawnee County Case No. 2020-CV-593, are available at https://bit.ly/3g5roJT.