By Sharon Coolidge
Enquirer staff writer
 |
Relavette
Price was sentenced to a week in jail.
(Ernest Coleman/The Enquirer)
|
A local Girl Scout troop leader traded $625 worth of Thin Mint cookies for seven days in the Hamilton County Justice Center.
Hamilton County Common Pleas Judge Melba Marsh said Thursday she ordered Relavette Price's jail time to send a message to Price's troop: "The way to build character and gain skill and be successful in this world is to do the right thing. If you do wrong, you get punished for it."
The Roselawn Girl Scout troop leader pleaded guilty Sept. 15 to stealing $625 worth of cookies - or 250 boxes - and taking $1,240 the girls earned selling cookies in 2003.
In addition to the week in jail, Price must also repay her former troop and spend two years on probation.
Authorities think the 31-year-old Westwood woman ate the cookies, but Price told Marsh she sold them and kept the money.
When asked what kind of role model she thought she was, Price said, "I taught them right, I just didn't do right."
Marsh was once a Girl Scout herself, she said.
Price, leader of Junior Troop 8715, based at the Academy for Multilingual Immersion Studies, also violated Girl Scout protocol in handling the cookies. That job usually is handled by a troop-member relative who is designated "cookie manager."
Price took the money the girls, ages 10 to 12, collected, and then wrote six checks to the Girl Scouts of the United States on an account that had been closed, prosecutors said.
When the check bounced, Girl Scout officials confronted Price, who promised to repay the money. She never did.
Cincinnati police arrested Price on July 1.
Troop parents hid the theft from their children, said troop cookie manager Juana Ervin, who praised the Girl Scouts of the USA Great Rivers Council because it gave the troop credit for all sales.
E-mail scoolidge@enquirer.com
TOP LOCAL HEADLINES
Flu shot available, just scarce
Miami U says 5 others likely weren't notified
Ex-TV reporter gets 5 years
Norwood put on fiscal watch
Pungent smell? That's money
Thin Mints long gone, and so is she - to jail
Anti-Allen suit dismissed
Parrott criticized for campaign flier
Players punished for bad behavior
Long-delayed station to open
Ohio has fewer children under 5 years old, Census finds
Public safety briefs
KENTUCKY HEADLINES
Who has the best band?
Ky. gets $126M for security
Bellevue gets friendly boost
Concert tonight helps good Samaritan
Ex-insurance man 'adviser'
Fletcher appoints Senate president's wife to judgeship
Building got ahead of itself
Knock against Hayden rapped
News briefs
ELECTION 2004
Bush, Kerry set for 'Town Hall' debate
Poll: Kerry, Bush appear neck and neck
Bush, Kerry placards swarm
Alleged fraudulent voter cards scrutinized
EDUCATION
Sycamore levy will be opposed
Cavalier Walkathon Oct. 15 supports Purcell Marian
Ky. board changes GED rules
NEIGHBORS
Liberty Twp. neighbors feud over 20-ft. flagpole
Soldier tells of war in Iraq
Neighbors briefs
ENQUIRER COLUMNS
Downs: I can't walk away from my mom's illness
Howard: NAACP dinner to honor four
LIVES REMEMBERED
Harold B. Sterneberg, former UC quarterback
R. Stanley Wallace, Presbyterian minister
Kentucky obituaries