Credit union failure Accountant, mother get prison sentence umaha (AP) - A federal judge sentenced the former accountant for a failed Omaha credit union and his 70 year-old mother to prison Monday for bank fraud and tax evasion. E. Thomas Harvey Jr. was silent as U.S. District Judge William Cambr idge sentenced him to four years and three months in prison on charges stemming from the failure of the Franklin Community Federal Credit Union. Mary Jane Harvey, who had been an officer of a non-profit umbrella group set up to help reduce Franklin’s overhead costs so that the credit un ion could help low-income people, received a three-year, 10-month sen tence. Authorities said $39 million was missing from Franklin when it was closed on Nov. 4, 1988. Most of the deposits were insured but a South Dakota order of nuns had $2.1 mil lion in accounts the National Credit Union Administration did not insure. When asked if he had any state ment before being sentenced, the 48 year-old Harvey said, “just again that I deeply regret my involvement in this entire matter.” The sentences were the maximum Cambridge could impose under fed eral guidelines in effect at the time of the crimes. The maximum sentence guideline was lower for Mrs. Harvey than for her son because she played a smaller role in the case, said First Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Thalken. ^ Mrs. Harvey’s attorney, Timothy Cuddigan, had argued that sentenc ing her to the three-year, 10-month maximum would be like sentencing her to life because of her poor health. He said she suffers from hyperten sion, diabetes and failing eyesight. But the judge said the seriousness of the crime merited the full sentence. Cambridge also sentenced the Harveys to three years probation once their prison terms are served. Defense attorney James Schaefer argued that Harvey had no prior legal problems and wasn’t responsible for the credit union’s failure. But Thalken said he found it dis turbing that Harvey felt he bore no responsibility for the credit union’s failure. “He was the mechanic” who made certain that financial records were hidden from authorities, Thalken said. Thalken also said the money miss ing from the credit union was sub stantial, the community suffered great harm from the crimes and Harvey once gave false testimony to a federal grand jury investigating the credit union. He said Harvey should be sen tenced to up to 80 months in prison, well beyond the maximum outlined by sentencing guidelines. Cambridge said he wasn’t order ing restitution because the Harveys wouldn’t be able to pay it. But Cam bridge said he may order restitution in the future if the Harveys show some ability to pay. The Harveys had no comment as they left the courtroom surrounded by friends and relatives. They were ordered to report May 13 to begin serving their sentences. Their sentencing came 22 months after they pleaded guilty to embez zling $1 million from Franklin be tween October 1984 and November 1988. The Harveys had entered the pleas in June 1989 under an agreement w i th prosecutors and had agreed to coop erate in the prosecution of Lawrence King Jr., Franklin manager and treas urer, and his wife, Alice. The Harveys’ sentencing had been delayed while court proceedings were pending against the Kings, who reached a plea agreement with prosecutors last February. King, a prominent businessman who sang the national anthem at the 1984 Republican National Conven tion, pleaded guilty to three of 40 original counts — conspiracy, em bezzlement and making false state ments. Mrs. King, who had faced 12 counts charging conspiracy and fraud, pleaded guilty to one count of filing a false tax return for 1986. The Kings are scheduled to be sentenced June 17. The NCIJA also has filed lawsuits against the Kings seeking to recover some of the money it says was miss ing from the credit union. The Sisters of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Aber deen, S.D., held $2.46 million in certificates of deposit in the credit union. The religious order has asked an appeals court to review a NCUA rul ing that repaid $360,000 of the or der’s deposits. The NCUA’s board rejected the order’s request for more reimbursement. President Bush’s tax bill down, decreasing slightly from 1989 WASMIIMU luN (AP) - Losses suffered by President Bush’s blind trust, apparently reflecting the reces sion, helped nudge the first family’s income down to $452,732 in 1990 from $456,780 the year before, re turns released by the White House showed Monday. As a result, their tax bill also de clined slightly — $99,241 to the Inter nal Revenue Service from the $101382 they paid on 1989 income. The family’s 1040 form, which lists President Bush’s occupation simply as “president” and Barbara Bush’s as “housewife,” showed they were due a $14,129 refund. However, the president decided to apply $10,000 of that to his 1991 taxes. Although well over half the first family’s income still comes from Bush’s blind trust, it also included the president’s $200,000 salary and $1,000 that Barbara Bush made for an article she sold to Reader’s Digest last fall on the importance of reading to chil dren^ The Bushes claimed $97,118 in itemized deductions, including $38,667 in contributions to 50 charities and $330 to unidentified charities by the blind trust. Bush also reported receiving $7,042 in royalties from his 1988 campaign book, “Looking Forward.” Both Bushes donated the proceeds from their writings to charity. The Bushes did not list any in come on Mrs. Bush’s bestseller, “Millie’s Book,” released last fall. However, Mrs. Bush said sepa rately that the volume, which pur ports to be told through the eyes of her pet spaniel, produced a First royalty check of $625,000 that was paid di rectly to charity. Meanwhile, Vice President Dan Quayle and his wife, Marilyn, re ported paying federal taxes of $24,558 on an adjusted gross income of $121,126. The Quayles’ income in cluded $1,702 in interest income and $ 11,742 in dividend income, all from Quayle’s holdings in his family-run Central Newspapers Inc. The vice president reduced his $123,250 vice presidential salary to $117,307 by contributing to a so called 401 (k) retirement plan, which allows taxes to be deferred until the money is drawn. The Quayles claimed $3,624 in charitable contributions and will re ceive a refund for $1,438 from the federal government. They also claimed a $9,625 loss associated with the costs of renting the house they own in McLean, Va. Congress told of tissue transplant1 WASHINGTON (AP) - A scien tist described for Congress on Mon day the nation’s first fetus-to-fetus transplant, but said future operations are jeopardized by the administra tion’s ban against federal support of research using electively aborted tis sue. Robert Slotnick, an obstetrician and geneticist at the University of California at Davis, said it won’t be known for weeks whether the surgery last May, involving the transplanta tion of tissue from an aborted fetus, saved a child bom in November from a fatal disease. “I wish I could tell you this was a success, but we don’t know that yet,” said Slotnick. “But I can tell you this work can’t continue without the sup port of the federal government,” he testified to the House Energy and Commerce health subcommittee. Slotnick recounted for lawmakers the still unpublished experiment in which tissue from a fetus aborted in an ectopic, or tubal, pregnancy was transplanted into a fetus with a rare disease called Hurler syndrome. The parents had two other children who died from the disease. The hope, said Slotnick, was for the transplanted tissue to produce blood cells that, in turn, would manufacture an enzyme that is missing in Hurler syndrome victims. He said it would be several weeks before he can deter mine whether that was the case. Cheney: No politics in proposed closings WASHINGTON (AP) - Defense Secretary Dick Cheney rejected congressional charges Monday that politics played a role in his pro posal to close 43 U.S. military bases and scale back 28 other installa tions. “When I made the announce ment ... I did not know a? that time which bases fell in which mem bers’ districts. I did not want to know,” the Pentagon chief told the Base Closure and Realignment Commission. Cheney said he wanted to avoid accusations that the list is based on political affiliation, but charges of partisanship surfaced even before the recommendation was officially announced on Friday. “I don’t know what those people are thinking about but it almost looks like the Democratic strong holds have been hit the worst,” said Rep. Joe Moakley, D-Mass., who complained about the proposed closure of Fort Devens. Among the major base closings are Fort Ord in California, located in the district of House Budget Chairman Leon Panetta, D Calif., and the Philadelphia Naval Ship yard, in the home state of House Assistant Democratic Leader Bill Gray and in the district of Demo cratic Rep. Thomas Foglieua. Cheney responded that the Cali fornia governor, Pete Wilson, and one senator, John Seymour, are Republicans while GOP Sen. Ar len Specter represents Pennsylva nia. The eight-member, independ ent panel has until July 1 to decide whether to approve or amend Cheney’s list before forwarding it to President Bush and Congress, who are required to accept or reject the package in its entirety. -—-1 Secret society refuses women, stays men-only NEW HAVEN,Conn. (AP) - Skull and Bones, the all-male secret society at Yale whose members include Presi dent Bush, was ordered closed for a year by its alumni directors after rebellious students invited women to join. The alumni directors have been debating whether to end the private club’s 159-year-old tradition as a bastion of male-only bonding, but were having difficulty reaching a decision. The 15 seniors in the current class of Bonesmcn, frustrated by the lack of action, notified the board of direc tors at an emergency meeting Friday night that they had invited seven women and eight men to join. In response, the board over the weekend replaced the locks on the “Tomb,” the windowless, mausoleum like building where the society meets. Sidney Lovett, the society’ssecre tary and assistant treasurer, said Monday that the alumni directors had no choice but to suspend operations for a year. « AppleCare® makes your college's Apple computer maintenance costs a matter of course... And keeps them wmkam strictly within budget. Having a computer on the fritz can be tantamount to missing school. Schedules get scuttled. Classes are rearranged. Term papers are postponed Research grinds to a halt. Learning stops while everyone waits for service. The problem is a growing one. Because increasing numbers of students, professors and administrators depend on computers. More students are taking courses to leam to operate comput ers. Professors are creating courses on computers. And computers are integral to analyzing a variety of academic data. 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