Polk County Circuit Court Clerk Report
Polk County Circuit Court Clerk Report
Polk County Circuit Court Clerk Report
Copies of this report are being forwarded to Governor Bill Lee, the State Attorney General,
the District Attorney General of the 5th Judicial District, certain state legislators, and various other
interested parties. A copy of the report is available for public inspection in our Office and may be
viewed at http://www.comptroller.tn.gov/ia/.
Sincerely,
Jason E. Mumpower
Comptroller of the Treasury
JEM/MLC
________________________________________Polk County Circuit Court Clerk
INVESTIGATIVE REPORT
Polk County Circuit Court Clerk
The Office of the Comptroller of the Treasury, in conjunction with the Tennessee Bureau of
Investigation, investigated allegations of malfeasance related to the Polk County Circuit Court
Clerk. The investigation was limited to selected records for the period January 1, 2018, through
April 1, 2022. The results of the investigation were communicated with the Office of the District
Attorney General of the 5th Judicial District.
BACKGROUND
RESULTS OF INVESTIGATION
Employees received at least $123,065.66 in wages and county-paid benefits for time not
worked. The clerk allowed multiple employees to submit timesheets claiming 40 hours per
week; however, the clerk gave employees one day off each week. The day off was not
reflected on employee timesheets for the period reviewed.
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________________________________________Polk County Circuit Court Clerk
Prior to January 2022, the clerk allowed employees to have one day off per week.
Furthermore, the clerk closed the office for one hour per day for lunch each workday.
Despite this time away from the office, seven employees improperly reported 40 hours per
week on their timesheets, which were approved and signed by the clerk before submitting
to the county executive’s office for payment. At the direction of the clerk, employees of
the clerk’s office only regularly worked 28 hours per week. (Refer to calculation below).
40 hours (reported hours) – 8 hours (one day off) – 4 hours (lunch off clock) = 28 hours
Exhibit 1
Timesheet improperly reporting 40 hours worked per week with no compensatory time
earned or used during May 2021
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________________________________________Polk County Circuit Court Clerk
A. At the direction of the clerk, employees were paid for 2,852 hours not worked
totaling at least $27,024.44.
At the direction of the clerk, employees were paid for 2,852 hours not worked totaling
at least $27,024.44. Timesheets for seven full-time employees reflected 40 hours
worked each week; however, the office was only open for 35 hours a week prior to
January 2022. Furthermore, many employees only worked four days each week,
totaling approximately 28 hours per week, yet their timesheets falsely reported 40 hours
and were signed by the employee and later approved and signed by the clerk. (Refer to
Exhibit 2.)
Exhibit 2
Total $ 27,024.44
Chart reflecting the number of unearned and overpaid hours multiplied by each employees’
hourly rate, totaling the $27,024.44 referenced above. Please note the employee’s names are
omitted.
B. At the direction of the clerk, employees were paid for 192 hours of unsupported
compensatory time totaling at least $1,943.51.
At the direction of the clerk, employees were paid for 192 hours of unsupported
compensatory time totaling at least $1,943.51. According to Polk County’s personnel
policy, overtime is defined as time worked in excess of 40 hours per workweek. The
county’s personnel policy allows for employees who work overtime to accept
compensatory time in lieu of overtime pay. Employees can be paid for all accrued
compensatory time at the discretion of the county. Since employees were regularly
working 28 hours per week, the accrual of compensatory time is unlikely and
questionable. Additionally, a review of employee timesheets revealed that employees
never reported compensatory time earned or taken on their weekly timesheets as
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required by the county’s personnel policy. Employees maintained their own
compensatory time balances and did not report those balances on their timesheets that
were submitted to the county executive’s office for payment.
Although these requests were not supported by records reported to the county
executive’s office, almost all were paid because the amounts “seemed reasonable”. In
one example, an employee submitted a request to be paid for 142.65 compensatory
hours. When the employee was denied the request, an amended request totaling 51.75
compensatory hours was submitted by the employee. The discrepancy between the
amounts reported in the two requests total 90.9 hours. The request for 51.75
compensatory hours was later paid by the county.
C. At the direction of the clerk, employees accrued 112.5 hours of annual leave and
used 35 hours of annual leave totaling at least $358.75 to which they were not
entitled.
At the direction of the clerk, employees accrued 112.5 hours of annual leave to which
they were not entitled. Furthermore, employees used 35 hours of the annual leave
totaling at least $358.75 to which they were not entitled. As previously mentioned,
employees were regularly working only 28 hours per workweek, which is four hours
under the minimum 32 hours that is required to be considered full-time by the county.
According to Polk County’s personnel policy, only employees who are classified as
full-time shall accumulate annual leave. Therefore, the clerk allowed employees to
receive this full-time benefit without meeting the full-time requirement. The unused
accrued hours remain improperly credited and attributed to the employees.
D. At the direction of the clerk, employees accrued 82.5 hours of sick leave and used
34 hours of sick leave totaling at least $347.05 to which they were not entitled.
At the direction of the clerk, employees accrued 82.5 hours of sick leave to which they
were not entitled. Furthermore, four employees used 34 hours of the sick leave totaling
at least $347.05, to which they were not entitled. As previously mentioned, employees
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________________________________________Polk County Circuit Court Clerk
were regularly working only 28 hours per workweek, which is four hours under the
minimum 32 hours that is required to be considered full-time. According to Polk
County’s personnel policy, only employees who are classified as full-time shall
accumulate sick leave. Therefore, the clerk allowed her employees to receive this full-
time benefit without meeting the full-time requirement. The unused accrued hours
remain improperly credited and attributed to the employees.
E. At the direction of the clerk, employees received county paid benefits totaling at
least $93,391.91 to which they were not entitled.
Based on payroll records, seven employees received county paid benefits totaling at
least $93,391.91 to which they were not entitled. As previously mentioned, the
employees were regularly working only 28 hours per workweek, which is four hours
under the minimum 32 hours that is required to be considered full-time. Since county-
provided insurance coverage was only offered to full-time employees, those who were
regularly working only 28 hours per workweek should not have received this benefit.
Benefit Amount
A. Time Not Worked $ 27,024.44
B. Unsupported Comp Time $ 1,943.51
C. Annual Leave Taken $ 358.75
D. Sick Leave Taken $ 347.05
E. Insurance Provided $ 93,391.91
Total $ 123,065.66
An employee of the clerk’s office was improperly credited with 48 hours of compensatory
time on her official date of hire. Due to funding, the clerk was advised to delay the hiring
of a replacement employee until the current employee completed their final two weeks of
employment. Although advised against it, the clerk allowed the replacement employee to
train in the office during the final two weeks of the current employee’s time in the office.
The replacement employee trained in the office for six days prior to being hired. Due to
funding, the replacement employee was improperly given 48 hours of compensatory time
on November 15, 2021, her official date of hire. (Refer to Exhibit 3.)
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________________________________________Polk County Circuit Court Clerk
Exhibit 3
The replacement employee’s first timesheet, for the period November 15, 2021, through
November 26, 2021, listing 48 hours of compensatory time accrued over the 2-week time period
Based on the replacement employee’s starting rate of pay, the value of the 48 compensatory
hours improperly accrued on her official date of hire totaled $422.40.
Employees received 108.92 unearned service credits with the Tennessee Consolidated
Retirement System (TCRS) by improperly reporting their employment status as full-time.
TCRS is a plan established by the Tennessee General Assembly offering retirement,
survivor, and disability benefits for public employees (state employees, teachers, local
government, and higher education employees) and their beneficiaries. The Polk County
Circuit Court Clerk’s Office is a participant in the TCRS.
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________________________________________Polk County Circuit Court Clerk
According to the TCRS Employer Manual, service credits are reported monthly, with a
maximum of 12 service credits per year for full-time employees. Service credits are a factor
in the defined benefit formula, which determines the retirement benefit due the member.
As previously mentioned, the employees were regularly working only 28 hours per
workweek, which is four hours under the minimum 32 hours that is required to be
considered full-time; therefore, these employees were not entitled to receive full-time
service credits with the TCRS. These unearned service credits are a factor which,
overstates their retirement readiness and benefit to be received.
Partial service credits are accrued when actual pay differs from regular pay. For instance,
if the regular pay was $2,000 per month but the employee was actually paid $1,500, the
employee would receive 0.75 months of TCRS service credit.
This finding has been reported to the TCRS.
A signature stamp belonging to the Polk County General Sessions Judge (judge) was
improperly used without the judge’s knowledge or approval. On June 16, 2021, two
expungement orders were completed for a defendant with two criminal charges. Due to the
classification of the charges, the orders for expungement should have been signed and
completed by a Judge of the Polk County Circuit Court. The clerk’s “FILED” stamp was
then placed over the judge’s stamped signature, although there were other locations on the
form where the “FILED” stamp could have been used. The judge’s stamp was maintained
within the clerk’s office, along with other various stamps. (Refer to Exhibit 4.)
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________________________________________Polk County Circuit Court Clerk
Exhibit 4
Since the signature stamp belonging to the judge was accessible to all members of the office,
investigators were unable to determine who improperly stamped the judge’s signature on the two
expungement orders in question. Tennessee Code Annotated does not provide authority for the use
of a signature stamp. Also, internal controls over the use of a signature stamp are inherently weak.
Management should discontinue the use of any signature stamps.
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Our investigation revealed the following deficiencies in internal controls and compliance, some of
which contributed to employees receiving unearned wages and benefits and the improper use of a
judge’s signature stamp.
According to the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 29 § 553.50 of the Fair Labor Standards Act,
for each employee subject to the compensatory time and compensatory time off provisions of
section 7(o) of the Act, a public agency which is a State, a political subdivision of a State or an
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interstate governmental agency shall maintain and preserve records containing the basic
information and data required by § 516.2 of this title and, in addition:
(a) The number of hours of compensatory time earned pursuant to section 7(o) each workweek,
or other applicable work period, by each employee at the rate of one and one-half hour for
each overtime hour worked.
(b) The number of hours of such compensatory time used each workweek, or other applicable
work period, by each employee.
Deficiency 2: A signature stamp belonging to the judge was not properly secured
Members of the clerk’s office had access to a signature stamp belonging to the judge. The signature
stamp was maintained within the clerk’s office alongside multiple other stamps. Due to the
accessibility of the judge’s signature stamp, investigators were unable to determine who
improperly stamped the signature on expungement orders. Tennessee Code Annotated does not
provide authority for the use of a signature stamp. Also, internal controls over the use of a
signature stamp are inherently weak. Failure to maintain proper controls of signature stamps
increases the risk of unauthorized, erroneous, or intentional signatures on various legal documents
and pleadings including those required for expungement of criminal records. Management should
immediately discontinue the use of any signature stamps.
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