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Boyd charges disclosed
Date published: 9/9/2009
BY PORTSIA SMITH
The head football coach of Caroline High spent the first day of school in court. Ben Boyd, 53, is facing forgery and uttering charges after authorities say he failed to disclose one of his two federal misdemeanor convictions and part of his sentence on his school employment application. This is the first public disclosure by the prosecution or defense of the basis of the charges. Boyd pleaded not guilty. Commonwealth's Attorney Tony Spencer claimed that Boyd intentionally left out information about his criminal history in fear that he would not be hired--and that he has done it before. Spencer said he will present as evidence Boyd's application to Caroline County Public Schools dated March 9, 2009. The application asks if the applicant has ever been convicted of a violation other than a minor traffic violation, and if so, to explain. Boyd answered "yes" and wrote "misdemeanor 1990--6 mths. probation $250 fine." Spencer said Boyd's writing was false. He wrote 1990--the year he was charged--when he was actually convicted in 1991; and he wrote six months' probation when he was actually sentenced to 18 months' probation and was not released from probation for almost 11 months. Spencer said he will also show that the Caroline application was not the first school application that Boyd has falsified. He said that the same question about criminal history was asked on applications in 1997 in Greensville County and in 1999 in Gloucester County, and that Boyd wrote that he did not have any prior convictions. Spencer said the question was not asked on a 2000 application in Franklin County, and school officials in that county were not aware of the convictions until September 2006, when the School Board and high school principal received anonymous envelopes that contained copies of an article published in The Roanoke Times that reported Boyd's convictions. "He's done it before and got away with it," Spencer said in court. "But someone had caught up with him. He knew he couldn't get away with it again in Caroline County, so he said, 'I'll tell them a little bit of the truth and hope they don't notice.'''
Read more stories about Caroline Date published: 9/9/2009
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