LA charter school operators face embezzlement charges

Los Angeles prosecutors have accused the Russian operators of a successful San Fernando Valley charter school with stealing more than $200,000 in taxpayer funds.

On Thursday, Ivy Academia's Eugene Selivanov, 38, and his wife, Tatyana Berkovich, 33, were charged with committing multiple counts of embezzlement, money laundering and filing false tax returns at the school from 2004 to 2009.

Flickr photo by bloomberries

Ivy Academia serves roughly 1,100 students from preschool to 12th grade. The charter was started in 2004 by Berkovich and Selivanov. 

The investigation by the Los Angeles County district attorney's office was triggered by the findings of a 2007 audit by LA Unified School District's Office of the Inspector General.

That audit found numerous instances where Selivanov transferred public funds from the charter to private businesses he and Berkovich controlled. The transactions were allegedly done online and were never recorded in the school's financial records. 

Prior to the audit, former teachers and parents accused school officials of falsifying attendance statistics in order to pump more state funds into their coffers.

Both Selivanov and Berkovich admitted to mixing money from the private and public accounts but denied misusing the funds, according to the Los Angeles Times.

If convicted on all charges, Selivanov's maximum sentence would be 14 years and two months in state prison, according to the district attorney's office. His wife faces a maximum nine-year sentence.

Janet Levine, the attorney for Selivanov and Berkovich, insisted upon the couple's innocence in a statement:

Eugene (Selivanov) and Tatyana (Berkovich) are educators and innovators, not criminals, and are confident that any fair and complete review of the facts will show that they acted honorably, ethically and legally in administering Ivy.

The corruption probe surfaced last year when investigators issued search warrants at Ivy Academia's campuses in Woodland Hills, West Hills, Winnetka and Chatsworth, the Los Angeles Daily News reported. 

For more information, see the 45-page audit below that authorities say tipped them off to problems at the charter.

LA OIG Audit of Ivy Charter 2007

Filed under: K–12, Daily Report

Comments

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Caroline Grannan's picture
If these charter operators are dishonest enough to allegedly steal, why do we assume that they're not also dishonest enough to cook their supposedly fabulous test scores? Just wondering.
russtar's picture
Ivy is one of the best school around.A lot better than public schools in the Valley,and I think LAUSD will do anything to destroy the only school in which children want to go.
Inulia's picture
Ivy does happen to be one of the best schools in town. This school is free to all children, yet provides private school quality education. The children are taught to work hard and that is why the scores are high. In this gentle yet competitive environment most children succeed. LAUSD and local corrupt politicians are scared of this school. Highest performing with 2000 waiting list. If the school is allowed to grow and prosper then most of the parents in the area will choose to move their kids to IVY. The disctrict heads wont have much to manage and will loose their cosy, high paying, useless seats in the district. Want to look for criminals, look no further than those who are persuing this persecution. I am a parent and know first hand how these two wonderfull, hardworking and devoted people had to fight and jump hoops for mere survival of this school. Most would give up but they persisted in creating a safe, and fulfiling learning environment for our children.
po's picture
Stephen McCray, principal with Lawndale Unified School District and wife Melonka Renaldo McCray. The dynamic duo started a charter school in South Los Angeles a few years back and it was soon closed down, but before being closed down they'd managed to secure a lot of money in donations, grants etc. and purchase many computers, a state of the art recording studio, servers, sporting goods (nice basketball courts, tennis equipment etc), 15 passenge Ford e350 van, surveillance system with 16+ cameras, a few LCD televisions and much more. When the school closed, they relocated the equipment to a location out of the way and literally filled the location with all the belongings. It sat there for months, with the McCrays telling people they were opening a tutoring location for the poor children in the area but suddenly, one day, all the equipment and goods were packed into the e350 van and storage containers and taken to storage facility in El Segundo, CA. All the school property eventually ended up at their home in Los Angeles, including the recording studio, basketball court, van, industrial fridge and freezer and more- about $85k worth of stuff! LAUSD was notified and there's an investigation but it's very slow. A hard drive they asked to have destroyed was never destroyed and contains much evidence. McCray continues his position as principal at a local elementary school with the superintendent not knowing anything that is happening.
po's picture
stephen mccray melonka renaldo fraud google search shows following allegations of embezzlement, misappropriation of public funds and high-scale nepotism - bring justice

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