Wagner’s acts shady in retrospect
Deirdre Newman
Hindsight is 20/20.
That’s what some of the people who knew Stephen Wagner -- who 10
years ago came under scrutiny for embezzling money from the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District -- would say about signs Wagner
showed of his misdeeds before he was arrested.
Eventually, the former budget director would plead guilty to
embezzling $3.5 million from the school district.
“When we asked him a question, sometimes he would turn bright red,
but who would make a connection like that?” said Martha Fluor, who
was on the school board at the time. “Now, in retrospect, you think,
‘Gee, was he lying and did we catch him? Was he uncomfortable? Was he
working extra time just to cover up his tracks?”
Wagner reportedly worked for the district for 18 years before he
began embezzling. His opulent lifestyle, including driving Rolls
Royce’s and wearing mink tuxedos to school functions -- on a yearly
salary of $76,200 -- did not raise any eyebrows. He told people the
money came from the stock market or buying or selling precious
stones, said trustee Judy Franco, who was a trustee at the time and
is running for reelection this fall.
He had a pleasant demeanor, by all accounts. He was the one person
trusted to get the district’s financial books right.
“He appeared to try to be helpful,” said Sherry Kallab, one of the
“gang of five,” a group of parents who took it upon themselves to
investigate the district’s finances eight months before Wagner was
put on leave because of a $1-million budgeting error that threatened
the layoff of elementary art, music and P.E. teachers. “He was
cordial, polite, but not real willing to give a lot of information or
explain why there were differences in certain areas.”
Wagner was young when he came to the district, and
then-superintendent John Nicoll took him on as a protege, Fluor said,
investing him with a good deal of trust and responsibility.
Nicoll remains tight-lipped when it comes to the subject of
Wagner, conveying his emotions -- which have had a decade to roil,
dissolve and surge again -- in measured words.
“I trusted him and he broke the trust,” Nicoll said.
Wagner was also known as a workaholic, which made him look devoted
to his job, Fluor said.
“He was always there on the weekends,” Fluor said. “In retrospect,
sure, he did some of the dirty work on the weekends.”
From jail, Wagner wrote Kallab a letter of apology. He eventually
died of complications from AIDS while still in prison .
“I felt kind of sorry for him,” Kallab said.
Kallab added she believes Wagner was tempted to embezzle to keep
up with the expensive lifestyle of Newport Beach.
His death will leave the answer to exactly “why” forever unknown.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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