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Article published May 27, 2005
BUREAU OF WORKERS' COMP
$10M to $12M missing from Noe's coin funds
Local dealer to face criminal charges, surrender passport
Authorities gather outside Tom Noe’s coin shop in Monclova Township. A search warrant was executed at the shop yesterday.
( THE BLADE/DIANE HIRES )

COLUMBUS — Federal and state authorities are pursuing criminal and civil charges against Tom Noe for allegedly misappropriating $10 million to $12 million from the state’s rare-coin investment.

Franklin County Prosecutor Ron O’Brien said yesterday that he has “reason to believe” Mr. Noe, a prominent Toledo-area Republican fund-raiser and rare-coin dealer, has misappropriated “more than $10 million” in state assets.

“I have reason to believe it is more than just missing assets or lost assets or otherwise,” said Mr. O’Brien, a Republican. “I have reason to believe there is actual misappropriation of state funds involved ... I’m talking about conversion for personal use.”

ALSO
Democrats rip GOP for scandal

It is unclear whether Mr. Noe used some of the state’s money to make contributions to Republican candidates, including President Bush’s re-election campaign, Mr. O’Brien said.

The Bush-Cheney campaign lists Mr. Noe as a “Pioneer,” for raising from $100,000 to $250,000 for the President’s re-election campaign.

The U.S. attorney’s office and the FBI are investigating whether Mr. Noe violated campaign-finance laws. That probe has focused on an October, 2003, fund-raiser in Columbus that generated $1.4 million for the Bush campaign.

Authorities leave the coin shop and will try to determine what has become of millions the state invested in rare-coin funds.
( THE BLADE/DIANE HIRES )

Gov. Bob Taft has scheduled a Statehouse news conference today to respond to the unfolding GOP scandal.

Mr. O’Brien said he didn’t have details of the alleged misappropriation, but he confirmed it involved money provided by the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation to Mr. Noe’s Capital Coin funds.

The Blade reported April 3 that since 1998 the bureau had invested $50 million in rare-coin funds controlled by Mr. Noe, despite concerns raised by a bureau auditor about possible conflicts of interest and whether the state’s millions were adequately protected.

The bureau is the state agency charged with paying medical bills and providing monthly checks to Ohio workers injured on the job.

Since 1990, campaign finance records show, Mr. Noe has contributed more than $110,000 to candidates for state offices and to various state Republican Party committees.

Asked where the state’s money went, Mr. O’Brien replied: “I don’t know the answers to that question. The search warrant might partly answer that.”

He referred to the search warrant executed yesterday afternoon at Mr. Noe’s Vintage Coins & Collectibles, his Monclova Township headquarters.

As many as 10 fraud investigators pored over evidence at Mr. Noe’s office as Ohio Highway Patrol troopers stood guard outside.

A technician photographed all the evidence inside the headquarters before it was brought outside and put into a state van backed up to the office warehouse. Late into the night, state inspectors loaded numerous boxes and at least eight desktop computers and a laptop into the van.

Inspectors confiscated more than coins in their sweep yesterday. One investigator said they found that Mr. Noe had purchased other collectibles with the state’s money, including a Christmas card signed by former First Lady Jacqueline Onassis and a document signed by Thomas Jefferson.

Mr. Noe has said through his lawyers that he will cooperate in the investigation. Mr. O’Brien said he expects Mr. Noe to make a full statement to authorities on his alleged misconduct in Lucas and Franklin counties.

Mr. Noe’s business is located in Lucas County and the Bureau of Workers’ Compensation made its rare-coin investment from its headquarters in Columbus, the seat of Franklin County and the state government.

The Ohio attorney general’s office is expected today to file a lawsuit in Franklin County Common Pleas Court to freeze all of Mr. Noe’s personal and business assets, along with those of his wife, Bernadette, said agency spokesman Kim Norris.

The Noes are both former chairmen of the Lucas County Republican Party.

Mr. Noe, who resigned earlier this month as a member of the Ohio Board of Regents and the Ohio Turnpike Commission, also has agreed to surrender his passport today at the Franklin County prosecutor’s office, Mr. O’Brien said.

State attorneys obtained a court order yesterday morning so bureau fraud investigators, state auditors, and the inspector general’s office could get access to the state’s rare-coin inventory housed at the headquarters.

For three days, bureau fraud investigators were barred access to the site.

After the hearing yesterday morning, three attorneys representing Mr. Noe provided information to Mr. O’Brien and the chief of his white-collar crime unit about the misappropriation of state assets.

Mr. O’Brien said he then contacted Lucas County Prosecutor Julia Bates, a Democrat; U.S. Attorneys Greg White of the Northern District of Ohio and Gregory Lockhart of the Southern District; attorneys for the governor, the Bureau of Workers’ Compensation, Attorney General Jim Petro, and state Auditor Betty Montgomery.

Inspectors load a state vehicle with boxes and computers from Tom Noe’s coin shop. He is the subject of multiple inquiries.
( THE BLADE/DIANE HIRES )
Rare coins viewed

Bureau fraud investigators began to view the rare coins inside Mr. Noe’s vault at about 11 a.m. yesterday, said Jeremy Jackson, the bureau’s press secretary.

At 1:30 p.m., Mr. Noe was required to provide a complete inventory list so the inspection and audit of the rare coins could start, according to the order signed by a Franklin County Common Pleas Court judge.

But Mr. Jackson said the audit never began because Mr. Noe’s attorney, Bill Wilkinson, contacted the state to say that $10 million to $12 million of assets are “unaccounted for.”

“Any review ceased and the appropriate authorities were called in,” Mr. Jackson said.

THE NOE FILE
• April 3: The Blade first reports that the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation has invested $50 million in rare coins with Maumee coin dealer and prominent Republican fund-raiser Tom Noe. The initial story also reports that two gold coins worth $300,000 were lost in the mail in 2003 and that Mr. Noe wrote off $850,000 in bad debt to cover a failed business relationship.

• April 7: Gov. Bob Taft defends Mr. Noe and the state’s investment in rare coins in a Blade interview. “The bottom line is: Is it making money for the state? And it was. He was making money for the state; what’s the problem?” the governor said.

• April 7: Ohio Inspector General Tom Charles announces he will investigate “alleged wrongful acts associated with the investment practices” of the state Bureau of Workers’ Compensation.

• April 22: The Blade reports that Mark Chrans, the California coin dealer who caused Mr. Noe to write off $850,000 in bad debts, was convicted in 1986 of fraud and perjury in federal court for faking a coin transaction to cover up drug money. Chrans spent less than a year in a federal penitentiary.

• April 27: Federal authorities confirm that the FBI is investigating Mr. Noe for possible violations of campaign contribution laws. Federal agents are probing whether Mr. Noe gave people money in order for them to give to the Bush re-election campaign, allowing him to exceed federal spending limits.

• May 1: The number of missing rare coins purchased with state money rises to 121, documents obtained by The Blade show. State records show that 119 coins, in addition to the two gold coins “lost in the mail,” were also missing and possibly stolen by a Colorado coin dealer hired by Mr. Noe.

• May 9: State officials announce that they will dissolve their $50 million investment in rare coins with Mr. Noe. “We had concerns about the ability of the managers to commit the necessary time and resources to make it profitable,” said a state spokesman.

• May 10: Mr. Noe resigns his seats on the Ohio Turnpike Commission and the Ohio Board of Regents. Governor Taft says he did not request the resignations but will accept them.

• May 11: The Blade asks the Ohio Supreme Court to order the state Bureau of Workers’ Compensation to release uncensored records related to the bureau’s $50 million investment in rare coins with Mr. Noe.

• May 12: The Blade reports that Governor Taft’s former chief of staff, Brian Hicks, twice rented Mr. Noe’s Florida Keys home and paid below- market price for his spring-break stays.

• May 18: Five of Ohio’s seven Supreme Court justices announce they will not hear any public records cases brought before the court that involve Mr. Noe. The five, including Judith Ann Lanzinger of Toledo, are all recipients of campaign cash from Mr. Noe.

• May 23: Governor Taft orders state fraud investigators to “execute a complete inventory” of all rare coins owned by the state. Investigators are refused entry by Mr. Noe at offices where coins are kept.

• May 24: Ohio Attorney General James Petro goes to court to take control of state rare-coin funds from Mr. Noe. The Ohio inspector general seeks telephone and e-mail records from Governor Taft’s office for four high-level current and former employees who allegedly took gifts from Mr. Noe.

• May 25: The Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation says bureau personnel are conducting “around-the-clock” surveillance of Mr. Noe’s Monclova Township office after three days of excuses to Ohio fraud investigators. Also, the bureau threatens aggressive legal action if Mr. Noe does not start cooperating.

• Yesterday: A host of law-enforcement agents raid the Noe headquarters, seizing state assets and carting away computer hard drives. State officials then announce they will be filing civil and criminal charges against Mr. Noe for the misappropriation of $10 million to $12 million from the state’s coin funds. The Maumee coin dealer is to surrender his passport to authorities today.

Inspector General Tom Charles, the state’s anti-corruption watchdog, asked for help from the Lucas County prosecutor’s office on Wednesday. He wanted the local office to assist the highway patrol in getting the search warrant.

In asking for the search warrant, the prosecutors said there was evidence of theft, obstruction of justice, and tampering with evidence, Ms. Bates said.

“We were asked quite frankly to get in there and help them get these coins,” Ms. Bates said last night.

The search warrant did not indicate who may have committed the crimes, nor did it say where they occurred, she said. The warrant allowed the highway patrol and the inspector general’s office to scour Vintage Coins and take everything from coins to computers.

Lucas County Common Pleas Court Judge Jack Zouhary signed the search warrant yesterday afternoon and it was executed shortly afterward.

Mr. O’Brien said he would meet next week with Ms. Bates and U.S. Attorneys White and Lockhart to coordinate the investigation into the alleged misappropriation of state assets by Mr. Noe.

The search warrant was executed to “make sure the assets that currently exist are seized along with any other evidence and move forward in a joint investigation with everybody involved,” Mr. O’Brien said.

Jon Richardson, who is representing Mr. Noe regarding the federal investigation, said he has not been contacted regarding the criminal allegations made by Mr. O’Brien. He expects he will represent Mr. Noe in the matter.

A federal grand jury is expected to begin hearing from witnesses Wednesday. The U.S. attorney’s office has acknowledged that it is investigating Mr. Noe and law enforcement sources have said it centers on contributions made to a Bush-Cheney fund-raiser in October, 2003, at which Mr. Noe sponsored a table.

A number of local Republicans attended the $2,000-a-plate event. President Bush flew in for the luncheon, which raised $1.4 million for the campaign.

Sam Thurber, husband of Lucas County Commissioner Maggie Thurber, said last night that he has been called to testify before the grand jury. He spoke briefly outside a fund-raiser for Betty Shultz, an at-large Toledo city council member.

Mr. Thurber, Ms. Thurber, and Ms. Shultz donated to the Bush-Cheney campaign at the time, although the Thurbers each contributed $1,950, records show.

Ms. Shultz acknowledged that she, too, has been summoned to appear before the grand jury. She declined further comment.

At the time of the fund-raiser, Mr. Noe had already given the maximum $2,000 to the campaign for the primary. It is illegal to give someone else money to donate on your behalf.

Colorado joins probe

Jacki Tallman, a spokesman for the Jefferson County, Colo., Sheriff’s Department, said detectives from her staff have joined Ohio authorities in investigating the Colorado ties to the state’s rare-coin investment.

In October, 2003, the sheriff’s office investigated the apparent mail theft of two gold coins worth about $300,000 from the venture’s Colorado office. A former employee, Michael Storeim, reported the theft to authorities, but Mr. Noe never contacted civil investigators about the missing state-owned coins.

“We are onboard with the current, reopened investigation,” said Ms. Tallman. “We are working with the state of Ohio.”

Ms. Tallman said two Jefferson County investigators have been assigned to the case.

Mr. Storeim’s attorney, Brian Jeffrey, said he had “no idea” these developments were forthcoming. Mr. Storeim has been blamed by Mr. Noe and colleagues for the misappropriation of 121 coins from the fund’s suburban Denver office.

“It does certainly appear the problem with the fund is not Mr. Storeim,” Mr. Jeffrey said. “This all came as a surprise to us. We had no idea there would be anything like this discovered.”

Earlier this month, Mr. Storeim filed suit against Mr. Noe, claiming the Maumee businessman instructed at least two of his employees to seize $500,000 worth of his valuables from the Denver office.

Calls for Conrad’s ouster
Democrats yesterday called for Governor Taft to oust or suspend James Conrad, the bureau’s administrator-CEO.

House Minority Leader Chris Redfern called for the suspension of Mr. Conrad until a full investigation of the rare-coin scandal is complete.

“Here’s a guy who defended this investment and now $10 million to $12 million are missing,” Mr. Redfern said.

“He should have no role in this investigation. There is one person who decided to invest these dollars and that is Jim Conrad.”

Mr. Taft, who initially defended the state’s investment in rare coins, wouldn’t talk to The Blade last night.

He released a statement that said: “Today’s news makes it clear that Tom Noe has irresponsibly mismanaged the monies of the state of Ohio. Such criminal action is outrageous and will not be tolerated.”

Mark Rickel, the governor’s press secretary, declined comment about whether Mr. Taft would remove Mr. Conrad or force his resignation.

Sen. Teresa Fedor (D., Toledo) said she and others who questioned the state’s rare-coin investment since The Blade broke the story were “met with resistance every step of the way.”

Ms. Montgomery, a former Wood County prosecutor who has received $4,350 in campaign contributions from Mr. Noe, said she did not call for a special audit until May 16 because she wanted to make sure she wouldn’t interfere with federal investigations.

Ms. Montgomery said she would not discuss the results of the search warrant. She said she won’t place an estimate on the rare-coin inventory until Sotheby’s completes its evaluation.

She said she expects the results of the special audit to be used in the criminal investigation of Mr. Noe.

In addition to the search warrant, authorities have subpoenaed records to pinpoint transactions within the Capital Coin funds, Ms. Montgomery said.

“We will look at the inventory that has been purchased by BWC dollars and see where it is now. Is it still in the asset base? Does the inventory we have been given match the coins that we see or the investment collectibles that we are reported to have purchased?” she said.

The inventory inspection also involves an investigation of whether Mr. Noe’s Capital Coin invested part of $55 million in state funds to buy autographs, paintings, sports cards, and other collectibles, or whether those items were used as collateral.

A law enforcement source with knowledge of the investigation said that besides the Christmas card signed by Jacqueline Onassis and the document signed by Thomas Jefferson, other collectibles bought with state funds include a rare photograph of Abraham Lincoln without a beard, a Norman Rockwell painting, and baseball cards and autographed baseballs.

There are thousands of items in the store, and include items related to almost every president.

“He’s claiming these were all investments,” the source said.

Mr. Noe was present during part of the day but was not in the store during the evening search. None of his representatives was there, the source said.

“We have no concrete proof that these collectibles and memorabilia are part of the Capital Coin fund,” said Mr. Jackson, the bureau’s press secretary. “We have no financial records to show how they were bought by the Capital Coin fund if that in fact was the case.”

John Annarino, the bureau’s chief legal counsel, said: “It’s an ongoing process to decide what belongs to us and what does not belong to us.”

Mr. Jackson said “to the best of my knowledge,” no other “collectibles and memorabilia” were found at the other four sites where Capital Coin stores inventory: Sarasota, Fla., Wilmington, Del., Broomall, Pa., and Evergreen, Colo.

When fraud investigators on Wednesday pressed to check the coins, Mr. Noe’s attorney, Bill Wilkinson, instead showed them several collectible items that he said the state owned through Mr. Noe’s Capital Coin.

“It was the first time anyone at the bureau knew there were such things that were there,” said Mr. Conrad, who said bureau officials then contacted the attorney general’s office.

Scott A. Travers, a rare-coin expert and author of several coin collecting books that stress consumer protection, said he found it hard to believe that $12 million in coins could be stolen. The number is just too large, he said.

Mr. Travers said he suspects other investments might be the reason for the losses, or that some technical reason related to how the money was invested outside of coins could be the problem.

“I find it difficult to believe. I think Noe is too savvy. I just can’t see the guy taking the coins. I can’t imagine it. I just can’t imagine how someone can lose $12 million in coins. It’s a lot of money. It’s beyond comprehension; I don’t believe that it happened,” Mr. Travers said.

As chairman of the U.S. Mint’s Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee, which advises the Treasury secretary on coinage, Mr. Noe has achieved acclaim and respect within the industry, Mr. Travers said.

Blade staff writers Steve Eder and Christopher Kirkpatrick contributed to this report. Contact James Drew at:jdrew@theblade.comor 614-221-0496.


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