Tag Archives: allison

Burchett Amends Campaign Disclosures, Blames Wife for ‘Deception’

A week before he was set to explain a series of irregularities in his campaign disclosure forms, reports Mike Donila, Knox County Mayor Tim Burchett filed 11 amendments to the reports and supplied state election officials with an affidavit that blames his ex-wife for the mistakes.
The former Allison Burchett, the mayor alleges, “engaged in a pattern of deception” by transferring thousands of dollars to various accounts for her own “personal benefit” and without his knowledge.
In the 24-page affidavit submitted Oct. 15 to the Bureau of Ethics and Campaign Finance, the mayor’s Nashville-based attorney Stephen Zralek says his client was “unaware of any failure from within his campaign to follow campaign finance laws” and that Burchett has “made a complete accounting of all monies based on the records available.”
The mayor also amended sets of finance disclosure forms covering Jan. 1, 2009, through June 30, 2011. Those records were filed with the Knox County Election Commission and include a statement by the mayor.
He says that when the reports were initially filed he “had no knowledge of the inaccuracies contained in those reports nor did I have knowledge of any nonpolitical uses of campaign funds.”
He said he and his new campaign treasurer, Roger Goins, a certified public accountant, have since investigated the matter and that “I strongly suspect that some campaign funds were used for personal use by my ex-wife, Allison Beaver (formerly Burchett).”
The mayor on Friday declined to comment.
“I think the affidavit speaks for itself,” he said.
Allison Beaver did not offer comment when contacted.
The Oct. 15 filings precede the mayor’s Nashville attorney’s meeting Tuesday before the Tennessee Registry of Election Finance to answer questions about Burchett’s campaign reports. Burchett doesn’t plan to attend the meeting.

Burchett, Wife Settle Divorce Differences

Knox County Mayor Tim Burchett and his estranged wife Allison have struck a deal to settle their divorce, court records show.
Further from Jamie Satterfield’s News Sentinel report:
Under the terms of the deal, Burchett walks away with the marital home and half its contents. Allison Burchett currently is living in that home but must vacate it in 30 days.
Each had alleged the other was guilty of inappropriate marital conduct. Allison Burchett’s attorney, Martha Meares, had not filed any document specifying her claim against the mayor.
Burchett’s attorney, Albert Harb, however, did file a specific claim alleging Allison Burchett had cheated on her husband during the marriage.

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Burchett PayPal Campaign Donations Went Into Personal Account

Four electronic donations to Knox County Mayor Tim Burchett’s 2010 election totaling $2,000 were not recorded on his campaign finance disclosure reports as required by law, reports Mike Donila.
The money was deposited into an “Elect Burchett” PayPal account, an online system that allows people and businesses to transfer money via email. In four other instances, records show that a combined $1,600 was shifted out of that PayPal account and into Burchett’s personal PayPal account, which at times he has used to buy goods from Ebay, an Internet auction site.
The transfers and how the money was used also were not recorded on disclosure reports. The eight transactions took place between Jan. 26, 2010, and Oct. 28, 2010.
Burchett, a Republican, became mayor Sept. 1, 2010. The mayor blamed his estranged wife, Allison Burchett, for the campaign finance law violations, saying he did not have access to the Elect Burchett PayPal account and was unaware funds were moved into his personal PayPal account.
“My wife set up this PayPal account, handled all funds deposited in the account and was the only person with access to the account,” Tim Burchett said in a one-page “press release” that he gave to the News Sentinel.

TRA Gets Executive Director, Two New Part-time Directors

Thirty days after a new law took effect transforming the Tennessee Regulatory Authority, the utility regulating agency got an executive director and a quorum for its new part-time board on Tuesday.
Earl R. Taylor, a Panera Bread franchisee who lives in Knoxville and has previously worked as a consultant to media companies, was named as the full-time executive director of the agency jointly by Haslam, House Speaker Beth Harwell and Senate Speaker Ron Ramsey.
Previously, the TRA had four full-time directors and no executive director. Under the legislation passed this year at Haslam’s urging, it will have five part-time directors and a full-time executive director.
Two of the part-time director positions were also filled Tuesday by appointment of James Allison and Herbert Hillard.
Allison is president and CEO of the Duck River Electric Membership Corp., headquartered in Shelbyville. He grew up in Maryville, according to Haslam spokesman and is described in a news release as “also regarded as one of the top instant replay officials in college football after having been an on-field official in the Southeastern Conference for more than 12 years.”
Hillard is executive vice president and chief government relatons officer of First Horizon National Corp. in Memphis.
Two of the former full-time TRA directors – Kenneth Hill and Sara Kyle – remain as part-time directors after the agency overhaul. One part-time director position still remains to be filled.
The new law took effect July 1 and when it did, the agency was left with only two of the part-time board members in place – not enough for a quorum – and with no executive director. The appointments Tuesday resolve that situation.
Taylor was not among the 18 persons who initially applied for the TRA executive director position.
“We wanted to cast as wide a net as possible, so we had those who applied and we also had conversations with others who might be interested,” said Haslam spokesman David Smith in an email. “We’re excited Mr. Taylor is willing to serve in this capacity.”
Taylor’s resume, provided by the governor’s office, says that as a Panera franchisee since 2000, he has developed stores in Florida and has stores under development in Texas and Louisiana. Before that, he was employed by Harmony Media as a consultant. In the 1990s, the resume says Taylor “developed and signed-on” WBXX-TV, Channel 20, in Knoxville and served as general partner and in other capacities at WKXT-TV in Knoxville.
Before that, he practiced law in Johnson City. He holds a bachelor’s degree from UT Knoxville and a law degree from the University of Memphis.

Note: The governor’s news release is below.

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Allison Burchett Links Mayor’s Campaign Checks, Personal Account

Knox County Mayor Tim Burchett’s household checking account shows deposits that match undisclosed checks his wife wrote to herself in 2010 against his mayoral campaign fund, reports the News Sentinel.
On one statement, those deposits add up to more than 70 percent of all the money deposited that month into the Burchetts’ joint account, which subsequently was used to pay for mortgages, utilities, insurance, gas, credit cards and personal purchases.
Allison Burchett, who is seeking a divorce from the mayor, met with a News Sentinel reporter and editors to respond to her husband’s statement that he was unaware that she had written checks to herself from the Elect Burchett mayoral fund that were not revealed on campaign disclosure statements as required by law.
Allison Burchett allowed the journalists to review statements from the couple’s joint First Tennessee Bank checking account covering a period of several months during the mayor’s 2010 primary and general election campaigns.
But she would not release copies of the statements to the newspaper without the mayor’s permission. Burchett refused, saying: “I will not legitimize Allison’s conduct by agreeing to debate these issues in the newspaper nor release private information for that purpose. All of these issues will be thoroughly vetted in my divorce. This is an intensely personal and private matter and I intend to try to keep it that way.”
The News Sentinel reported June 24 that Allison Burchett wrote six undisclosed checks to herself totaling $15,053.56 from the mayoral election fund. She also wrote a check to herself for $4,250, listing it on the disclosure statement as reimbursement for payment to a company that has said it did no work for the Burchett campaign.
The day the story appeared, she was fired from her job at Clayton Bank, she said. She had been hired into the executive position shortly after the mayor’s election in 2010.
…Although she was not the campaign treasurer, Allison Burchett filled out her husband’s disclosure forms during the campaign and handled the “Elect Burchett” checking account. She did so, she said, under her husband’s direct supervision.
“Tim oversaw the campaign account, Tim instructed me to write the checks and Tim is the one that instructed me to deposit the checks into our joint bank account,” Allison Burchett, who filed for divorce in late April, said in a prepared statement. “Tim knows this and it is hurtful that he would feign ignorance of it to try to portray me as a villain or a thief. I am neither. I did trust him, and as far as I knew, Tim’s instructions for me to write the checks and to deposit these checks in our joint account were entirely appropriate.”
Tim Burchett denies the allegations, saying it was his wife’s job to manage the account while he focused on campaigning. He says the receipts supporting the campaign expenditures are at the couple’s home, which he can no longer access.
“As a result of these matters having been brought to my attention for the first time,” he said in a prepared statement, “I have initiated a complete review of every expenditure in my campaign account. That process has been complicated because all of the records are in the possession of my wife. I have and will continue to amend my campaign financial disclosures as required and a full reconciliation of the accounts will be completed. My wife, Allison Burchett, continues to discuss the matter with the News-Sentinel and has inappropriately provided them confidential information.”
Allison Burchett says she has no campaign expenditure receipts
.

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Burchett Corrects Some Campaign Disclosure Omissions

Expenditures for two checks written by Knox County Mayor Tim Burchett’s wife during the 2010 election are now correctly recorded as required by state campaign finance law, reports Mike Donila.
And, the mayor said Friday, he’s looking into amending more finance statements to account for other undisclosed payments from the Elect Burchett account.
“We just corrected an error. It happens,” Burchett said. “When you’re in a campaign you get hundreds of checks and you’re going 100 miles an hour.”
At issue were eight checks written by Allison Burchett between March 16, 2010, and Jan. 9, 2012. Six of them the mayor’s wife wrote to herself, and they totaled more than $15,000.
She also wrote a $550 reimbursement check to Dean Rice, the mayor’s chief of staff and former 2010 campaign manager, and a $1,354 check to Pilot Travel Centers.
On June 22, after the News Sentinel questioned the mayor and Rice about the expenses, the campaign’s political treasurer, Albert Miller Jr., filed a set of amended disclosure statements.
The new documents list the expenditures Rice claimed, as well as the expenses paid to Pilot Corp. According to the statement, Rice was reimbursed for “campaign expenses such as HQ supplies and campaign meals.”
The payment to Pilot is for fuel, according to the finance records.
“It came to my attention that the check to me had not been disclosed, so if there’s an error, I wanted to correct it,” Rice said.
The checks Allison Burchett wrote to herself, however, are still not documented.
Also still unchanged are three listed expenses she made on the disclosure statements that are larger than the actual written checks as well as a $4,250 expense for a company that said it did no work for the mayor in the campaign.
“We’re working on that,” the mayor said. “We’re doing a comprehensive review of the whole thing to get it straightened out.”
Allison Burchett, who filed for divorce in late April, said her husband told her at the time to make the changes and to not record some of the expenditures. The mayor has said that’s not true.

Burchett, Wife Dispute Blame for Unreported Campaign Spending

Knox County Mayor Tim Burchett’s wife wrote six checks to herself totaling $15,053.56 from his mayoral election fund that were not included on the campaign finance disclosure statements as required by law.
Further excerpts from Mike Donila’s thorough report:
Some of the biggest checks were written right after the August 2010 general election and carried notations that said they were “reimbursements,” although specific information was not noted.
In addition, Allison Burchett wrote two other unrecorded checks to: Dean Rice, the mayor’s chief of staff and former campaign manager, for $550.45; and Pilot Travel Centers, for $1,354.64.
At the same time, she listed expenses on the disclosure statements as being larger than the checks that actually were written. She also listed a $4,250 expense for a company that said it did no work for the Burchett campaign.
Allison Burchett, who filed for divorce in late April, said her husband directed her at the time to make changes and to not record some of the payments. Tim Burchett denied the accusations.
“All I was doing was what I was told to do,” Allison Burchett said, adding that “all of this was completely foreign to me.”
“I was in no way responsible for, or in charge of, his campaign account,” she said. “I simply did exactly what Tim told me to do, paid who he told me to pay, and disclosed what he told me to disclose. Ultimately, Tim is the one who signs the report and swears it to be true.”
The mayor said his wife oversaw the campaign finances and “it was my job to win the election.” He said he wasn’t aware of any discrepancies until they were pointed out to him by the News Sentinel last week.
“She was in charge of the account,” he said.
…The eight unrecorded checks, provided to the News Sentinel under the promise that the source remain anonymous, were written and cashed between March 16, 2010, and Jan. 9, 2012.

Expenses don’t line up
It was not unusual for the mayor’s wife to write checks to herself, although much of the time she recorded reasons for the expenses on the disclosure statements.
For example, Allison Burchett wrote herself a check for $2,334.42 in April 2010 for what was listed as “Label Industries” on election finance forms. A month later she wrote herself a check for $2,837.41 for what was listed as campaign signs.
In July of that year, she wrote herself a $4,250 check for what was listed as campaign advertising by a business identified as “Singulaiis,” an apparent misspelling of a political advertising firm called Singularis, which has the Kansas address listed on the disclosure form. Asked about that expense, Tim Burchett said he did not remember if the campaign had used a company called Singularis but that it might have.
A company representative told the News Sentinel that it has no record of doing business with the mayor.
Allison Burchett also wrote checks to reimburse herself for items that were listed as “mailings” and “printings” on the campaign disclosure forms.
There are, however, three instances in which checks were written to businesses but the expenses on the campaign disclosure report were recorded as more than what the signed checks reflected.
Those differences, which occurred in mid and late 2010, accounted for $2,400 in additional expenses that weren’t actually paid.
In one case, the campaign wrote a check for $512.46 to “Burns Mailing and Printing” for “palm cards,” but the finance report, which Allison Burchett filled out, reflects a $1,512.46 cost. Another time the campaign wrote a check to Pilot Travel to cover $587.28 in “auto expenses,” but the finance report lists the charges as $1,587.28.
A third time, the campaign reported a $434.16 donation for “Salvation Army (flood relief)” but the check was written for $34.16.
Many of the expenses listed on the disclosure statements do not have any corresponding checks from the campaign account.

Knox Mayor Burchett’s Wife Files for Divorce

From Mike Donila:
Knox County Mayor Tim Burchett’s wife filed for divorce Friday afternoon, citing irreconcilable differences, almost four years after the two were married.
According to the five-page complaint filed in Knox County Chancery Court, Allison Burchett says her husband is “guilty of such inappropriate marital conduct as will be proved at the hearing of this cause.”
Allison Burchett, 30, says she should be “awarded a reasonable amount of alimony, both temporary and permanent,” and that Burchett should cover her legal fees. The complaint provides no other detail.
“Everybody knows somebody who has gone through this and it’s very unfortunate,” Tim Burchett, 47, said.
He declined to comment on his wife’s vague allegations, adding that “I don’t know what it means. I don’t know what those accusations are.”
Allison Burchett responded to a request for comment with the following statement:

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