School payroll employee accused of adding $114K to her paychecks

A woman who was in charge of payroll at a charter school in Price has been arrested and charged with giving herself unauthorized extra pay since 2020.

A woman who was in charge of payroll at a charter school in Price has been arrested and charged with giving herself unauthorized extra pay since 2020. (lusia83, Shutterstock)


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PRICE — A former employee of a charter school in Price has been arrested and accused of illegally taking funds from the school and adding them to her own paycheck.

Kalisa Lynn Fish, 51, was arrested Wednesday for investigation of misuse of public funds and theft.

Earlier this month, administrators from the Pinnacle Canyon Academy, 210 N. 600 East in Price, went to police claiming Fish had stolen about $114,500 since 2020, according to a police booking affidavit. She was fired from the school on May 15.

According to the school, "there is a 'special' line on the payroll, (for) teachers who are after-school advisers or coaches." the affidavit states. Those people get extra money in their paychecks.

Fish, who "handled the payroll and HR duties at the school," has been adding "special" pay to her own paycheck since 2020 even though she "does not have another position with the school and should not be receiving any additional wages," according to the affidavit.

When confronted by school administrators, Fish — who had been an employee for about 15 years — told them "she started doing it because she was in a financial crisis, but then just continued to keep doing it," the affidavit alleges. Her alleged actions started in 2020 when the school was shut down due to pandemic protocols.

After confronting Fish, the administrators said they received a call from Fish's mother asking if they could "work something out" to pay the school back, the arrest report states.

"There is no denial, or claims of a misunderstanding. Rather, just a request to be able to pay back the school, which heavily implies there are funds that need to be paid back," the affidavit says.

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Pat Reavy interned with KSL NewsRadio in 1989 and has been a full-time journalist for either KSL NewsRadio, Deseret News or KSL.com since 1991. For the past 25 years, he has worked primarily the cops and courts beat.

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