Fraud trial of former N.S. hospital CEO to focus on travel expenses: Crown

HALIFAX — The fraud trial of a former Nova Scotia hospital chief executive began Monday in Halifax with the Crown alleging that she deceitfully used public money for personal flights to her Ontario home and other ineligible expenses.

However, the opening day also saw Tracy Kitch’s defence lawyer assert her client never falsified her expenses and that her claims were approved by the chair of the hospital’s board.

Kitch, former CEO of the IWK Health Centre, faces charges in Halifax provincial court of breach of trust and fraud over $5,000 stemming from the investigation into her expenses.

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A Grant Thornton review ordered by the hospital’s board in 2017 found about $47,000 in expenses deemed “potentially personal” were charged to the children’s hospital. Kitch paid back all the expenses within months of stepping down that summer. She was earning an annual salary of $296,289 at the time of her departure.

In his opening statement, Peter Dostal, the lead Crown prosecutor in the case, said he would build a case over the next two to three weeks showing public money was spent for personal purposes — which he said would be sufficient to prove fraud.

“We’re asking the court to consider whether the use of the (public) money in a personal fashion is fundamentally dishonest from a reasonable person’s perspective,” Dostal said. 

He also said the trial will focus on about 68 expense transactions over three years, including flights between Toronto and Halifax, adding that the Crown will present evidence showing they are of a “clearly personal character,” rather than for business reasons.

“Most of these expenditures took the form of the accused purchasing a flight pass, an (airline) product that is essentially the pre-purchasing of … flights,” said Dostal, adding there were also hotel, meal, taxi and baggage charges included between August 2014 and June 2017.

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Dostal noted that Kitch had a residence in Oakville, Ont., and took frequent trips there during her employment at the IWK. He told Judge Paul Scovil that the bulk of the allegedly improper purchases occurred through Kitch’s corporate credit card.

The prosecutor said some of the transactions weren’t necessarily fraudulent but are relevant because they “arguably” were expenses for business reasons with “a significant personal benefit,” such as frequent trips to Toronto to work with a communications consultant on speeches.

The opening witness for the prosecution was Det. Christian Pluta, the lead Halifax police investigator. He testified that the investigation began when he and other police officers reviewed the “unauthorized expenses” outlined in the Grant Thornton review in September 2017.

Pluta said he interviewed senior executives, public relations staff and board members at the hospital as well as assistants to Kitch and the team that prepared the Grant Thornton review.

The detective said he spent a month poring over all of the expenses, including 155 credit card transactions. Some of the purchases, such as flights, were one purchase but would include 10 flight passes, said Pluta. “They (the transactions) were noted to be outside IWK policy,” he testified.

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However, defence lawyer Jacqueline King put a series of questions to Pluta suggesting to the officer there isn’t evidence of deliberate deception by Kitch.

She noted before the court that when Kitch had a personal expense on her corporate card, such as putting up a relative at a hotel or transporting her son in a taxi, she would indicate this to her executive assistant and use phrases such as “please track it,” to indicate her intention to reimburse the money.

“Did you see anywhere in the plethora of documentation you were given … where you found a receipt and it said, ‘She was having dinner with so-and-so, but really this was a charge for her and her husband?’ Was there anything put on that (form) that wasn’t true?” she asked the detective.

“No,” he replied.

Outside court, King called the charges against her client, “unfortunate,” adding, “I want to make sure all the evidence comes out ….There are a number of indications (in evidence) very contrary to what the public perception is.”

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Stephen D’Arcy, the hospital’s former chief financial officer, is charged with breach of trust, unauthorized use of a computer and mischief to data in the same matter. His trial is set to begin May 30, 2022.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 8, 2021.

Michael Tutton, The Canadian Press