A former travel agent convicted of embezzling hundreds of thousands of dollars paid by more than 150 parents for school trips that were canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic was sentenced Monday to six months of home detention and six months of probation.
Marie Colette Martin, 53, was charged with spending funds she received on “personal expenses” instead of refunding parents after the trips were canceled.
The California Attorney General’s Office says Martin, who was based in San Diego, solicited travel funds from parents at nine different schools in Los Angeles and Orange counties.
The trips would have sent eighth-grade students from those schools to Washington D.C. and other East Coast locations in 2020, but the pandemic prevented the trips from happening.
Martin reportedly spent the money on personal costs instead, including credit card purchases, rent and artwork.
Prosecutors say she was unable to refund the parents because she had already been “experiencing cash flow problems and commingling client funds” and had used the parents’ funds for personal expenses.
Martin, who was jointly prosecuted by the California Attorney General’s Office and the San Diego County District Attorney’s Office, pleaded guilty to one felony count of failure to return funds as a seller of travel.
She may later petition to have the count reduced to a misdemeanor.
The crime bars her from registering as a seller of travel for seven years, according to prosecutors.
Martin had already paid around $256,000 in restitution as of Monday’s sentencing hearing.
Prosecutors say some of that money will go to victims, while other victims have already been refunded through the Travel Consumer Restitution Corporation, which assists consumers who suffer losses for a variety of reasons, including failure of sellers to travel to provide services.
City News Service contributed to this report.