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Former Tobin School administrators fined for taking their kids to a play downtown with tickets meant for students at the school

The state Ethics Commission yesterday announced that former Tobin School Principal Natasha Halfkenny and Assistant Principal Coreen Miranda had both paid $4,000 fines for taking their sons to a performance of "Hamilton" downtown using some of the tickets a local charity had donated to the school for its students and their chaperones last year.

None of their sons was a Tobin student, and the tickets had face values of about $149 each, the commission said.

Miranda informed Halfkenny, her direct supervisor and personal friend, that she planned to allocate one of the chaperone tickets to herself and two of the Tobin School student tickets to her minor sons, who were not students at the Tobin School or in Boston Public Schools, and asked Halfkenny if she would like to chaperone. Halfkenny did not prohibit Miranda from bringing her sons to the show and agreed to chaperone. No other employees of Tobin School were offered the opportunity to chaperone. Rather than making the opportunity to attend Hamilton known or available to all Tobin students, Halfkenny and Miranda themselves chose a group of nine eighth-grade students to attend the show. At some point, Halfkenny and Miranda allocated an extra ticket to Halfkenny’s minor son, who was not a Tobin or Boston Public Schools student.

By providing their sons with Hamilton tickets intended for Tobin School students, Halfkenny and Miranda violated the conflict of interest law’s prohibition against public employees using their official positions to obtain for themselves or others valuable privileges that are not properly available to them. ...

This case is a reminder that public employees must not use their official positions to get themselves or others special, valuable privileges to which they are not entitled, and that there are legal consequences for doing so.

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Comments

I'll do it for $140,999. And if I don't get the job, I'll just keep making that sweet defense and oil stock money.

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Voting closed 31

It's not a very consequential crime, but it is selfish petty corruption of a type which drags less-developed countries down. In "shithole" countries, government resources are channeled to officials and their families.

Selfless service and putting the students first should be the only option for highly-paid BPS administrators.

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Voting closed 86

Every public sector worker in MA has to do an annual training on this.

Anything over $25 in value is a BRIBE by law. They specifically mention theater, sporting event, and concert tickets in the training.

No excuses. Bust their entitled arses.

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Voting closed 68

Any amount with the corrupt intent / offering or soliciting cash, gifts, services &c for favorable action is bribery I think, but there are annial gift limits I hear.

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Every public sector worker in MA has to do an annual training on this.

Not even. I was involved with the MBTA Rider Oversight Committee and they made all committee members take this training. And this was a volunteer position.

The state makes E V E R Y O N E associated with the state take this ethics training.

So its not like they didn't know.

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Voting closed 26

So firing one is unlikely....even if they are breaking rules / laws.

As an example, Another principal last year was found to have spent $38k on vacations, so....

Massachusetts principal charged with spending nearly $40K of school funds on all-inclusive tropical vacations
By Joshua Lynch
Published Aug. 2, 2023
Updated Aug. 2, 2023, 8:59 a.m. ET

236
A former Boston high school principal is charged with misusing nearly $40,000 in school funds for personal use, including two luxurious all-inclusive vacation trips to Barbados.

Naia Wilson, who served as New Mission High School’s headmaster for 13 years, admitted to authorities she committed wire fraud totaling approximately $38,806 in the elaborate scheme, according to a DOJ press release on Tuesday.

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Voting closed 24

So let's have all those non-line administrators step in and step up.

Maybe they'll learn something about running a school?

There is no excuse for this behavior. Every state and local worker has to do trainings on it - and "tickets" are part of what you aren't supposed to accept.

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Voting closed 35

If there is no corrupt intent tickets are ok as long as the face value, or fair market value, whichever is higher (in addition to ant other gifts) does not exceed something like $50-

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Voting closed 15

If there is no corrupt intent tickets are ok as long as the face value, or fair market value, whichever is higher (in addition to ant other gifts) does not exceed something like $50-

Maybe don't make these kind of claims if your best knowledge is that the limit might possibly be "something like $50".

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Voting closed 14

I see. I need to address my replies so my meaning does not become confused as new replies come in. I was disputing/questioning a comment above that doesn’t sound right - that a bribe must surpass a $25- threshold and I said it’s not about dollar amount, but rather about intent, whereas a gift up to 50 beans may (or may not) be legit. This misappropriation of tickets and abuse of public trust is whack whether it’s less than or equal to $50- or greater than $50.

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Voting closed 15

I need to address my replies so my meaning does not become confused as new replies come in.

The way to avoid your meaning being confused is to check your facts. Your statement:

it’s not about dollar amount, but rather about intent, whereas a gift up to 50 beans may (or may not) be legit

for example -- did you check that this has a basis in fact? That "50 beans" is the limit? No? Then why make the statement?

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Voting closed 7

Do you even read the posts you're replying to? It says right in the fucking post that the tickets were worth $150.

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Voting closed 19

What else do they siphon off besides their generous salaries?

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Voting closed 37

Shameless grifters taking opportunities away from the kids they’re trusted to develop!

And what else indeed?
Definitely more than tickets thrown in their lap.

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Any comments from the mayor or superintendent?

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Is that this is the behavior that directly undermines all of the ethical people who are doing their best for kids every day in the BPS.

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I think the worst part is the kids who didn't get to go or were not selected because the principal was playing favorites.

Those tickets were meant for kids who couldn't afford to go.

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Voting closed 25