MILWAUKEE - A former associate of Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker was sentenced Friday to two years in prison after he was convicted of embezzling more than $51,000 from donations intended to help veterans and their families.
Kevin D. Kavanaugh, 62, is the fifth person close to Walker to be convicted as a result of a long-running secret probe, and a sixth person is scheduled to face trial next month. Walker himself has not been charged with wrongdoing.
Before sentencing, Kavanaugh told the judge, "I'm truly sorry for disappointing all my fellow veterans." But Judge Michael D. Guolee, whose voice cracked with emotion when he recalled the testimony of soldiers' widows, dismissed the apology as "worthless."
"I don't see any remorse, no tears, no angst, no trying to explain what you did with all that money," Guolee said.
Kavanaugh, whom Walker had named to the Milwaukee County Veterans Service Commission, was the treasurer of the Military Order of the Purple Heart, a veterans' service organization. His job included distributing checks of at least $600 apiece to the widows and children of Wisconsin service members killed in action.
Prosecutors said Kavanaugh skimmed money from bank deposits and also made phony withdrawals, and then altered the books to mask the transactions.
Kavanaugh is a Vietnam veteran who was honorably discharged and received a Purple Heart after he was injured in a grenade blast, defense attorney Christopher Hartley said. Hartley noted that Kavanaugh has also been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and has a problem with alcohol.
But the judge said he needed to send a message to anyone who would steal from a charity, especially stealing from the fellow veterans Kavanaugh was expected to serve.