Watch the water.
Watch CA.
Supposedly those involved go as high as the state capitol.
TY 40_Head!
Former Central California water manager stole $25 million in water over 23 years, prosecutors say
The former general manager of a Central Valley water district has been charged with stealing more than $25 million worth of water over 23 years, the latest development in a years-long saga of corruption and theft, federal authorities said Thursday.
A federal grand jury returned a five-count indictment against 75-year-old Aptos resident Dennis Falaschi, according to the U.S. attorney’s office for the Eastern District of California.
He faces one count each of conspiracy and theft of government property, and three counts of filing false tax returns, according to the indictment.
Falaschi was the general manager for the Panoche Water District, which serves portions of Fresno and Merced counties near Dos Palos, Firebaugh and Los Banos, according to court documents.
The indictment does not name the water district, but in 2018, then-California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra announced the arrest and filing of felony charges against five individuals for the misuse of public funds amid widespread corruption at the district.
Falaschi is among the defendants in the ongoing state case.
CALIFORNIA
Five officials charged with misusing public funds, burying hazardous waste at Central Valley water district
>paywall
>https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-panoche-water-district-arrests-20180222-story.html
Feb. 22, 2018
The water theft scheme began in 1992, according to the federal indictment.
That year, Falaschi was informed that an aging, abandoned drain turnout on the Delta-Mendota Canal, part of the federal Central Valley Project, was leaking water into a parallel canal that the water district controlled, the document stated.
A gate inside a pipe that connected the two canals had been cemented shut years earlier when the drain was abandoned, but the cement had cracked, according to the indictment.
After learning about the leak, Falaschi allegedly told a water district employee to install a new gate inside the standpipe, which could be opened and closed on demand, the document stated. He later told the employee to put in a lid with a lock on top of the standpipe, and a roughly 2-foot elbow pipe angled at 90 degrees into the water district’s canal.