Former Church Point banker pleads to embezzlement
Aug 31, 2011 | 5358 views | 0 0 comments | 41 41 recommendations | email to a friend | print
LAFAYETTE – Sentencing, which could be up to 30 years, has not yet been scheduled for a former Church Point banker who pleaded guilty to embezzling more than $100,000.

Steve J. Brousard, former president of Farmer’s State Bank, admitted to one count of misapplication by a bank employee and officer.

He used the banks money for an assortment of personal expenses from July 1998 through January 2004. He had left the bank about four years prior to his July 2008 federal indictment of 22 counts.

According to prosecutors, he has made restitution of about $15,000 of the $120,000 involved.

The case file asserts:

Broussard hired three men as contract laborers for the bank and then directed them to spend about 30 percent of their time working on his personal property, although they were being paid by the bank, the filing says.

From 1998 through 2004, Elroy Meche, Felton James Bellard and Joseph Charlot were paid $231,750, of which $69,254 went toward work performed on Broussard’s property, the filing says.

Between June 2002 and September 2004, Broussard fraudulently received $38,930 in cash advances from ATMs using his bank-issued credit card and a bank-issued card linked to an ATM testing account at the bank, the filing says.

Of that, $24,705 has not been repaid to the bank, the filing says.

From September 1998 through December 2003, Broussard had the bank purchase $13,149 in cooking supplies for the Circle S Cooking Team, one of his private activities.

Only about 50 percent of the team’s activities served a legitimate bank purpose, the filing says.

Between November 2002 and December 2002, Broussard directed the bank to give out a loan to newly elected Church Point City Councilman Melckisadech Green in order to gain influence on the city council, the filing says.

Green did not qualify for the loan, which ultimately cost the bank $1,294 when Green defaulted and failed to repay it, the filing says.

Between January 1999 and July 2004, Broussard charged $1,715 to his bank-issued credit card for unauthorized personal items at Walmart, the filing says.
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