A former South Dakota Department of Corrections employee will be on probation for four years after earlier pleading guilty to crimes involving a prison inmate.
22 year old Madyson Bixby of Sioux Falls was charged with two felonies– Compounding a Felony and Possession of an Unauthorized Article. In Minnehaha County Circuit Court Tuesday (Jan. 7, 2025), she was sentenced to two years in prison on each count, all suspended, providing she successfully completes probation.
Attorney General Marty Jackley says the charges were connected to an investigation involving an inmate conspiring with another person to burn someone’s car in January of last year (Jan. 4, 2024) in Sioux Falls. He says Bixby also brought a cellphone into the prison and gave it to the inmate.
Prosecutors had asked for four years in the state prison.
This case was investigated by the South Dakota Division of Criminal Investigation and the South Dakota Department of Corrections Special Investigations Unit. The case was prosecuted by the Attorney General’s Office.
Bixby makes the seventh state government employee charged with fraud related to their work in the past six months.
Thursday (Jan. 9, 2025), 28 year old Amalia Escalante Barrientos from Brookings was charged with Obtaining Money, Property or Assistance by Fraud from Social Services or Related Programs. The former state Department of Social Services employee is charged with a misdemeanor for using a DSS grocery voucher intended for families in need, for personal use. Barrientos has not yet made her initial court appearance. (The maximum penalty is a one-year sentence in the county jail, a $2,000 fine or both.)
In December (Dec. 30, 2024), 64 year old Lynne Hunsley of Pierre was sentenced to probation for three years after pleading guilty to Forgery and Grand Theft by Deception. She was accused of using her position with the Department of Revenue’s Division of Motor Vehicles to falsify records to avoid paying $1200 in tax liabilities to the state.
In a related case, Danielle Degenstein (deegan-stine), also of Pierre, was charged with Misprison of a Felony, meaning she knew a felony crime was happening, but didn’t report it to authorities (a misdemeanor that carries a maximum sentence of one year in custody, a $2,000 fine or both). This case is still pending and she is presumed innocent under the U.S. Constitution.
Also in December (Dec. 17, 2024), 55 year old Renee Strong of Springfield was charged with forging and falsifying food service inspection reports while performing inspections for the Department of Health through a contract with the Department of Public Safety. She’s charged with 13 Class 6 felony counts of Offering False or Forged Instruments for Filing or Recording in a Public Office and 13 Class 5 felony counts of Forgery. Each Class 6 felony carries a maximum sentence of two years in prison, a $4,000 fine or both. Each Class 5 felony has a maximum sentence of five years in prison, a $10,000 fine or both.
In August (Aug. 16, 2024), Attorney General Marty Jackley said there would be no charges filed against Sandra O’Day of Pierre, who is now deceased. The former state Revenue Department employee was accused of making fraudulent transactions that were used to secure almost $400,000 worth of loans at banks between 2016 and 2023.
In July (July 17, 2024), 68 year old Lonna Carroll was accused of stealing an estimated $1.8 million in state and federal funds from the Child Protection Services program, while working as a state employee between 2010 and 2023. She’s charged with two felony counts of Aggravated Grand Theft.
Jackley says he intends to submit bill proposals during the 2025 legislative session that would “enhance accountability, improve transparency and better protect South Dakota taxpayers.” He is also proposing to revise provisions related to the delivery, possession with intent to deliver, and possession of unauthorized articles by inmates in a state correctional facility.
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