Woman pleads guilty to stealing more than $40K from Montgomery food pantry
The former business director of the Footprints of Montgomery, a food pantry, pleaded guilty Friday in Lycoming County Court to stealing more than $40,000 from the nonprofit organization.
Before President Judge Nancy L. Butts, Shawn M. Coles, 52, formerly Shawn Gawblick, told Butts that she was using that last name now, with her attorney Kyle Rude, accepted responsibility and pleaded guilty to a charge of theft by unlawful taking $40,442 from the food pantry, charges that were filed by state police.
Butts told her she would not be sentenced by her and it would be another judge doing that sentencing. “I can’t say when or which judge,” Butts said. Butts will no longer be on the bench in 2026, having lost a retention vote in the general election.
The maximum penalty for the charge is seven years plus a $15,000 fine, but Butts explained it was likely to be a split sentence of parole with jail time and probation with no jail.
“You’ve allowed a mitigated sentence and are willing to have her serve the longest sentence a person can in county prison,” Butts said looking at the group of victims gathered in the courtroom. That is 11 /12 months to 24 months minus one day – which is a parole sentence, according to Butts and confirmed by the county Adult Probation Office..
Butts further explained to the victims that not every case is disposed of on the same day a plea is entered.
“My client has no intention to withdraw a plea prior to or after sentencing,” Rude said, a statement that appeared to ease any concerns of the victims.
She will not be taking this to a jury trial, nor will she be sentenced to serve in state prison. An abbreviated pre-sentence report will be done to assist whichever judge is there for the sentencing. Coles said she is prepared to make full restitution to the nonprofit. The defendant requested more time to be able to pay the restitution through Lycoming County to make the nonprofit whole quicker, Rude said.
She used the food pantry’s business bank card to withdraw $32,894 from the organization’s account between 2021 and earlier this year and misappropriated an additional $8,000 of the food pantry’s funds to help her pay for personal utilities for her home and for her other business, a coffee shop in the borough. She joined as business director in August 2021, and left the organization in February of this year.
