State auditors find ‘a mess’ in review of Madison County finances

(Radio Iowa) – State Auditor Rob Sand says his office has identified serious discrepancies in Madison County’s financial records.”These are not minor findings. This is a big deal,” Sand said. “…Taxpayers in Madison County deserve better.” Auditors combed through records from a 24 month period — from June 1st of 2022 through June 30th of 2023. Sand says they found missing checks and unverified deposits.

“There is such a mess down there in bookkeeping…we don’t know and cannot determine what was supposed to be where,” Sand said. Madison County Treasurer Amanda DeVos was arrested early last year and has been charged with theft, fraud and felonious misconduct in office. She resigned last summer and is scheduled to go on trial this fall. Sand says auditors from his office who went to Winterset to do a cash count found 221-thousand dollars worth of checks, cash and coins sitting the Madison County Treasurer’s office and there was no proof of where more than a third of the money they saw that day came from.

“Deposits were sometimes made months late,” Sand said. “At one point, there were actually 39 separate deposits totaling $4.4 million made on the same day.” Sand says DeVos also delayed or misdirected tax payments to schools, cities and other entities in Madison County. DeVos is accused of documenting that her property taxes and vehicle registration fees as paid.

“And an I.O.U. was found in the treasurer’s office instead,” Sand said. Sand’s office has forwarded its two most recent audit reports to the county attorney and the sheriff in Madison County and to Iowa’s Attorney General and the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation.

In December, Madison County’s Board of Supervisors hired an accounting firm in Georgia to conduct future audits of the county’s finances rather than have the state auditor’s office do the work.