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News / Clark County News

Ex-president of Clark County aviation group faces theft charges

Camas man accused of stealing thousands of dollars

By Doug Flanagan, The Camas Post-Record
Published: June 24, 2023, 6:05am

Camas resident Kent Mehrer is set to appear on a summons Thursday in Clark County Superior Court to face first-degree theft and money-laundering charges.

Mehrer, 74, the former president of the Camas-Washougal Aviation Association, is accused of stealing thousands of dollars from the Camas-based nonprofit, which promotes aviation, supports the long-term operation and survival of Grove Field, and mentors future pilots through its scholarship program.

Former Camas-Washougal Aviation Association Treasurer Sally Luse reported that, during the summer of 2022, she had discovered as much as $20,000 missing from the nonprofit’s checking account, and Mehrer, then the association’s president, was the only person who had access to the group’s debit card.

Luse contacted the Clark County Sheriff’s Office, which assigned Detective Jon Shields to investigate the missing funds. On Jan. 26, Shields said he had found probable cause to arrest Mehrer on multiple charges and referred the case to the Clark County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office.

Senior Deputy Prosecutor Jeannie Bryant filed theft and money-laundering charges against Mehrer on May 24, court records show.

After being named the Camas-Washougal Aviation Association treasurer in the summer of 2022, Luse attempted to obtain its financial records to become a signer on the organization’s accounts at iQ Credit Union, according to Shields’ report.

“She said she made appointments with Kent Mehrer, but that he would often make excuses for several weeks on why he wasn’t able to meet her,” the report states. “(Luse) said (Mehrer) canceled so many times, she began to be suspicious.”

On July 28, according to Shields’ report, Luse met Mehrer at an iQ Credit Union branch to gain signatory authority on the accounts and deposit money the association had collected during its annual steak feed event.

This is when Luse discovered there was only $431.85 in the organization’s checking account and a “minimum balance” in the savings account, “despite receiving a treasurer’s report at each board meeting (indicating) that there should (be) significantly more funds in the accounts,” Shields noted.

According to the police report, Luse, a former auditor, froze the accounts, canceled the association’s debit card and asked for several years’ worth of statements to perform an audit. Later that day, Mehrer submitted his resignation letter to the Camas-Washougal Aviation Association Board of Directors.

“I have made many personal financial mistakes and borrowed money from the CWAA accounts,” Mehrer stated in his letter, included in court records. “I know it is wrong and unforgivable. … I will acquire the funds I borrowed and return them to the CWAA. It will take me a while to do that.”

According to Shields’ report, Mehrer is accused of stealing $17,158 from the Camas-Washougal Aviation Association through cash, online account transfers and ATM withdrawals between July 26, 2020, and July 29, 2022. He allegedly made 70 financial transactions to deposit “the proceeds of his theft from the CWAA account … into his own personal account held at iQ Credit Union using an ATM” between July 26, 2020, and July 29, 2022.

Mehrer allegedly told Shields he was “working on a deal” with the Port of Camas-Washougal for the purchase of his property that borders the Grove Field airport.

“He said when that happens, he will have the funds to repay CWAA,” Shields stated in his report. “I asked if he had spoken to the board about that, and he said he hadn’t.”

Port commissioners approved an agreement to purchase Mehrer’s 5-acre airport-adjacent property for $900,000 in December 2022. The port gave Mehrer $20,000 at the conclusion of the sale and agreed to pay off the remaining mortgage balance on the property, $435,000. Mehrer will receive the remaining $445,000 in the form of monthly payments over the next 15 years.

“The $20,000 was supposed to be for us, and we never saw it,” Luse told The Post-Record in January.

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