Published December 18, 2009 09:30 pm - Co-owners of a Farrell ambulance company told its former president on Friday that they were moving on and trying to pick up the pieces from his nearly $116,000 embezzlement.
UPDATE: Ambulance co-owners move on from theft
By Matt Snyder
Herald Staff Writer
FARRELL
—
Co-owners of a Farrell ambulance company told its former president on Friday that they were moving on and trying to pick up the pieces from his nearly $116,000 embezzlement.
“Roy Allen Dulaney, we are not here to forgive,” said Shenango Valley Area Ambulance Service Inc. co-owner and vice president Walter M. Bedich. Nor were they there to chastise, Bedich said. They are moving on.
Dulaney, 51, of French Creek, W. Va., formerly of Sharon, was ordered to pay $70,000 of restitution, though he pleaded guilty to taking the full $115,599.
He had attributed the losses to a gambling problem, Southwest Mercer County Regional police said. Dulaney was in charge of the company’s finances, said a prosecutor.
“I truly am sorry for what I did,” Dulaney said in court. “The bottom line is, for 30 years, my life was about two things. One was being an educator. The other was being a paramedic. Having pleaded guilty to these charges, I can never be either one again.”
Bedich and current Shenango Ambulance president Craig L. Fenton, who were both owners alongside Dulaney, talked about the damage he had done to the company and the community.
According to Bedich, Dulaney stole more than money: “You stole the faith of the community we serve.”
Shenango Ambulance once sported four ambulances, which dropped to two because of a money crunch brought on by Dulaney. “It did hurt the Shenango Valley and surrounding areas,” Fenton said.
Now, the company usually has two to three ambulances out at once, he said. It may be another four to five years before they can fully mend the damage Dulaney did. In the meantime, it could mean slower response times in the valley.
Ambulance drivers were also hurt. There were payroll checks that bounced, and good employees left the company or even the industry, Fenton said.
It will be the goal of Shenango Ambulance to win back people’s trust, Bedich said. That is why they agreed on $70,000 restitution instead of the full restitution during the plea deal — to close the chapter and “restore the dreams, pride, and faith of the community of which you are no longer a part.”
Common Pleas Judge John C. Reed ordered a sentence that will take Dulaney out of the community — and put him behind bars — for 11 to 23 months, though he may be out in 8 months, 7 days with good behavior. He must also serve three years’ probation.
Southwest police got the first report of Dulaney’s theft Nov. 13, 2008, from officers of Shenango Valley Area Ambulance Service, 1001 Stambaugh Ave.
Dulaney had just been fired after he was shown bank statements detailing cash withdrawals from automated teller machines using his business debit card, police said.
Dulaney had made some of the 283 unauthorized withdrawals at casinos in Erie and Washington, Pa., and Wheeling, W.Va., police said.