Audit slams police use of gas cards
An internal audit released final week raises questions about gas purchases made by Tampa police officers using city-issued Shell gasoline credit cards.
"We could not conclusively determine whether all gas purchases were for City of Tampa vehicles and for commerce ambitions," concludes the audit.
According to the report, 77 purchases show officers bought more gas than the tanks of their city cars could hold. In some cases, they bought twice as much as the fuel tank capacity. The audit additionally found more than 140 gas purchases totaling more than $5,700 for cars that have been impounded or forfeited through drug arrests, even though such cars are generally not driven. Auditors plus rapped police officers for wasting more
The audit looked at all gasoline purchases made using the Police Department’s 1,136 Shell cards from December 2005 through May 2007. In no cases did officers use their credit cards on days they weren’t on duty, which would have been the most obvious indication of misuse, said Roger Strout, director of the city’s internal audit division.
Assistant Police Chief Michael George attributed most of the irregularities to bookkeeping errors and said new procedures should prevent future problems. Five officers, though, were disciplined for using premium gas.
Times staff writer
Original post by tampabaycom
No comments yet. Be the first.
Leave a reply



































