David W. Eckberg's debt in Stillwater's Lumberjack Days festival "was just a time bomb waiting to happen," an unpaid creditor said Friday after Eckberg was charged with 10 felonies.
The well-known promoter deposited more than $41,000 into personal bank accounts even as he was telling business vendors and a youth hockey booster club that he couldn't afford to pay money owed them, according to criminal charges filed in Washington County District Court.
Brian Mock, owner of Icabod Productions, said that made him even madder "than being screwed over, that there was a chance that we could have got our money." Mock, whose staging company is owed $20,000, said that he "still paid my guys. They did their work. I had to pay them out of my pocket."
The charges against Eckberg, 61, follow public complaints of unpaid bills and a year of investigation into Eckberg's finances. Five of the felony counts allege theft by check and five allege issuance of a dishonored check.
Several complaints of worthless checks filed with Stillwater police in October 2011 led to a City Council moratorium on summer festivals and the death of Lumberjack Days.
Criminal charges filed late Thursday allege that between late July and early November of last year, Eckberg deposited more than $41,000 from Lumberjack Days into his personal bank account and another held by his wife, Stacy A. Einck.
During this time Eckberg repeatedly told four creditors not to cash worthless checks despite having the money to cover them, the criminal complaint says.
Bad checks listed in the complaint totaled $54,859.