A former Mount Pleasant School District employee was sentenced in Camas-Washougal Municipal Court Thursday.
It brought a conclusion to the drama that has surrounded the small rural school since it first came to light in October that its bus driver had stolen gasoline by using the district credit card for her personal vehicle.
Judge Darvin Zimmerman sentenced former bus driver Cheryl Randall to one day in jail, 4 days of community service and put her on probation for two years. In addition, she must reimburse the school district $1,020.67 in stolen gasoline, pay $5,400 for the cost of the state audit to investigate the matter, and pay more than $500 in court fees and fines.
Randall broke down in tears during the sentencing, telling Zimmerman she’d been “wrongly convicted.”
When the judge reminded her she’d pleaded guilty to theft just five weeks prior, Randall replied, “I didn’t plead guilty to that [amount taken]. I didn’t do it.”
“Unless you’re keeping track and writing it down, how would you know?” Zimmerman asked her.