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David Reiter, 50, was the administrator for Westminster Presbyterian Church.

He was charged by Allegheny County district attorney’s detectives with theft by deception, receiving stolen property, forgery and other offenses. His wife, Connie, 44, faces two counts of receiving stolen property.

Mr. Reiter was hired as church administrator in 2001. He handled finances for the church, including payroll, transferring money between accounts, paying vendors and bank reconciliations.

In November, the treasurer of the church’s board of directors contacted the head pastor, Jim Gilchrist, about an issue with the church’s auditing firm, Sisterson & Co., according to a criminal complaint.

The treasurer, who is unnamed in court paperwork, said he had been trying to meet with the church’s assigned auditor, Drew Harrison, but Mr. Reiter kept making excuses about why the auditor couldn’t meet face-to-face. The treasurer finally called the firm and discovered that no one named Drew Harrison worked there, according to the complaint.

The number Mr. Reiter gave to the treasurer to contact the phantom Harrison was a prepaid cell phone purchased by Mr. Reiter with church funds, the complaint said. And Mr. Reiter had been impersonating the auditor when he spoke to the treasurer on the phone, according to the paperwork.

On Nov. 27, Rev. Gilchrist spoke to Mr. Reiter, who said he “needed to resign” because he had done some “bad things,” the complaint said.

Mr. Reiter told the pastor that he had stolen $500,000 to $530,000 over a period of 10 to 12 years, according to the complaint. When the two spoke again a few days later, he admitted to taking another $100,000 from the Early Childhood Education Programs, a separate entity located in the basement of the church, the complaint said.

Investigators determined that he had stolen about $1.2 million and deposited it into a bank account controlled by him and his wife, the complaint said. Ms. Reiter is charged with taking part in more than $900,000 of that theft, according to the district attorney’s office.

The Reiters, authorities said, used the money for a variety of personal expenses including family vacations, vehicle repairs, tickets to Pittsburgh Pirates games and groceries.

 
A former resident of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, has been sentenced in federal court in Pittsburgh to 30 months in prison and ordered to pay restitution of $1,407,649 to the Internal Revenue Service on charges of tax fraud, Acting United States Attorney Stephen R. Kaufman announced today.​
Senior United States District Judge Donetta W. Ambrose imposed the sentence on David Reiter, age 52, currently serving a state sentence of five to 10 years in prison. The federal sentence will be served concurrently with his state sentence.
According to the information provided to the court, beginning in and around 2011, until his termination from employment in 2018, Reiter as business administrator at Westminster Presbyterian Church located in Upper St. Clair, PA, engaged in a pattern of deception and fraud by regularly embezzling and converting to his personal use $1.2 million in funds belonging to church. The court was further informed that Reiter failed to pay over employment taxes and filed false personal income tax returns relating to the embezzlement, which materially underreported his personal income.

"David Reiter embezzled more than a million dollars of church funds and used them for his own benefit, all the while committing business and personal tax fraud," said U.S. Attorney Kaufman. "Federal tax law violations have serious consequences, which we have witnessed today."
"In his role as the Church’s Business Administrator, Mr. Reiter abused his position of power by embezzling funds that could have otherwise been used by the Church to carry out their mission", said Thomas Fattorusso, Special Agent in Charge of IRS-Criminal Investigation . "By fraudulently failing to report the embezzled funds on his personal tax returns as income, Mr. Reiter violated a fundamental rule of taxes which states that gross income means all income from whatever source derived. Mr. Reiter also committed the crime of failing to pay over the employment taxes that were withheld from the employees of the Church, which is a serious offense that results in the lack of significant tax revenue to the Unites States government. IRS-CI will continue to pursue anyone who collects employment taxes and fails to remit those taxes."


Connie Jo Reiter pleaded no contest in September to felony receiving stolen property and conspiracy to receive stolen property, and was sentenced to serve three years probation. Both were ordered to pay $979,406 in restitution to the church.

Connie Jo Reiter is not facing federal charges, but she filed a federal lawsuit in January against the church and Allegheny County agencies claiming she should not be required to pay restitution.

 
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