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Misuse of School Funds Raise Serious Questions of Oversight in Worcester County

A newly filed criminal case in Worcester County, Maryland alleges a years-long scheme in which a senior public school official diverted more than $118,000 in taxpayer-funded education dollars for personal use, raising broader concerns about financial oversight in local public school systems.

According to charging documents, Denise Renee Shorts, a former Assistant Superintendent, Chief Academic Officer, and Title I grant coordinator for Worcester County Public Schools, is accused of abusing her authority over federal education funds intended to support low-income students.

Prosecutors allege that between 2019 and 2025, Shorts used a school-issued purchasing card to buy personal items through Amazon, including household goods, clothing, electronics, and furnishings, which some were shipped to her home and even a vacation property in Florida.
 
To conceal the purchases, the documents claim she altered receipts, fabricated invoices, and submitted falsified documentation to the school system’s finance department, disguising the expenditures as legitimate classroom materials. In some cases, items like a robot vacuum, furniture, rugs, and iPads were allegedly misrepresented as school-related purchases or redirected for personal or private business use.
 
Investigators say the scheme went undetected for years, in part because the purchases were made using tax-exempt school accounts and were accompanied by falsified paperwork. The alleged misconduct was ultimately uncovered during a 2025 audit by the Maryland Office of Legislative Audits, which identified discrepancies between credit card data and submitted receipts.
 
Shorts now faces multiple felony charges, including embezzlement by a fiduciary, theft over $100,000, and misconduct in office.

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9 thoughts on “Misuse of School Funds Raise Serious Questions of Oversight in Worcester County”

  1. Former superintendent Taylor tried to cover up this crime, now he is running for county commissioner in Worcester County. Just what the county needs, a crook running it

  2. Clever that she kept it hidden for so long, but stupid for doing it in the first place.

    My prediction: some sort of probation after a hefty settlement where she pays it all back. She’ll move to Florida and we’ll never hear from her again.

  3. nottheimpostergigi

    WCPS CFO Tolbert has received multiple salary increases approved by his superiors for decades-long “systemic failures” in accounting. No wonder they need more and more funding every year – to fail and be rewarded for it.

  4. nottheimpostergigi

    “WCPS CFO Tolbert Named School Finance Official of the Year Worcester County Public Schools
    May 19, 2025”

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