Feds Zero in on Nursing Home Fraud in Williams Trial
Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams' corruption trial resumed Wednesday morning with prosecutors trying to convince the jury that Williams defrauded his mother's nursing home.
June 21, 2017 at 02:12 PM
3 minute read
Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams' corruption trial resumed Wednesday morning with prosecutors trying to convince the jury that Williams defrauded his mother's nursing home.
Testimony during the second day of trial started with Sylvia Randolph, a family friend of Imelda Williams. Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Zauzmer called her to the stand to ask about a $10,000 check her husband, Luther Randolph, wrote to Seth Williams' mother for her nursing home care—one that prosecutors claim Williams pocketed for himself, along with $13,000 in his mother's pension and Social Security benefits.
Although Sylvia Randolph's husband wrote the check, she testified that he was unable to appear in court because he was in a nursing home himself. Zauzmer asked her about how she knew Imelda Williams, as well as for how long, and whether she knew about the elder Williams' medical condition. Randolph responded that she and her husband were family friends and that they knew only that Imelda Williams was having trouble with her bills with St. Francis Center for Rehabilitation, located in Darby.
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