A 43-year-old Long Island mother who served as an NYPD transit officer now faces a felony grand larceny charge after prosecutors say she siphoned more than $50,000 from her children's elementary school PTA over three years, spending the money on everything from Best Buy electronics to Ticketmaster purchases, hotels, and restaurant meals.
Jodi Scarlatos of Centereach, New York, surrendered to the Suffolk County District Attorney's Office on Monday and was arraigned before District Court Judge Jonathan Bloom on a charge of grand larceny in the second degree, a Class C felony. She was released without bail.
If convicted, she faces five to 15 years in prison. Her next court date is May 5, 2026. The case lays bare what happens when a community trusts one of its own with the books, and nobody checks the math until it's too late.
Three years, one debit card, and a long list of personal purchases
Prosecutors say Scarlatos served as treasurer of the Jericho Elementary School PTA from July 2020 through September 2023. The Suffolk County District Attorney's Office said she began using association funds to bankroll personal expenses and outings around the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, a period when normal oversight of school organizations was disrupted across the country.
Fox News Digital reported that Scarlatos allegedly used a PTA debit card for personal spending and transferred PTA cash directly into her own bank account. The New York Post detailed the alleged purchases: Best Buy, Amazon, Verizon Wireless, Ticketmaster, restaurants, hotels, rental cars, and cash withdrawals.
None of that sounds like construction paper and bake-sale supplies.
The alleged theft went undetected until Scarlatos transferred control of the PTA bank account to a new board of members around 2023. When the incoming officers for the 2023, 2024 school year took over, they discovered discrepancies in the accounts, investigators said. Only then did the scope of the missing money begin to come into focus.
Mounting debt and a foreclosure lawsuit
Court records paint a picture of serious financial pressure behind the alleged scheme. A lawsuit filed in Suffolk County Supreme Court shows Scarlatos allegedly began defaulting on her mortgage payments in July 2022, squarely in the middle of her tenure as PTA treasurer.
By March 2024, U.S. Bank Trust National Association filed a foreclosure lawsuit against her. The suit states she owes a total debt exceeding $375,000.
The timeline is worth pausing on. She allegedly started dipping into PTA funds around mid-2020. She stopped paying her mortgage around July 2022. She kept control of the PTA accounts until September 2023. And the foreclosure suit landed six months later. The financial trajectory, if the allegations hold, suggests the school community's money was being consumed by a growing personal hole.
Cases like this, where people in positions of public trust face fraud charges, tend to share a common thread: unchecked access to other people's money and no meaningful audit until the damage is done.
An officer of the law, allegedly breaking it
Scarlatos was not just any PTA volunteer. She was an active NYPD officer during the period of the alleged theft. Her lawyer told Fox News Digital she had previously worked as a transit officer with the New York Police Department. She reportedly retired from the force in January 2025.
Fox News Digital said it reached out to the NYPD for more information. No response was reported.
The dual role matters. Parents in Centereach entrusted their PTA funds to a woman who wore a badge and carried the authority of the largest police department in the country. That makes the alleged betrayal sharper, not because officers are expected to be perfect, but because the public reasonably expects people who enforce the law to follow it.
The broader pattern of criminal misconduct allegations against law enforcement officers erodes the credibility of every honest cop on the beat. Each case that lands in a courtroom makes it harder for departments to maintain the trust they need to do their jobs.
A St. Jude fundraiser and the question of appearances
While allegedly draining the PTA treasury, Scarlatos maintained a public persona of community involvement. On January 17, 2023, well into the period prosecutors say the theft was underway, she posted a fundraiser on Facebook for St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.
"I've joined the fight to help end childhood cancer by participating in the St. Jude Math-A-Thon. I'm solving math problems and raising funds to help St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. You can help me reach my fundraising goal for the kids of St. Jude, who are battling cancer and other life-threatening diseases."
There is no allegation that the St. Jude fundraiser itself was fraudulent. But the optics are grim. Asking neighbors to donate to a children's charity while prosecutors say you were simultaneously looting a children's school fund is the kind of contrast that speaks for itself.
Fox News Digital also reached out to the Jericho Elementary School PTA for comment. No response was reported.
The DA's response
Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond Tierney framed the case as a breach of community trust. In a statement, Tierney said:
"Parent Teacher Associations serve a vital function in school communities throughout Suffolk County. The allegations in this case represent a betrayal of the trust the residents of Centereach placed in this defendant, and my office will continue to hold accountable everyone who unlawfully enriches themselves at the public's expense."
That language, "unlawfully enriches themselves at the public's expense", is pointed. PTA funds come from bake sales, spirit nights, book fairs, and direct donations from families who are often stretching their own budgets. When that money vanishes into someone's personal Amazon account, it's not a faceless institution absorbing the loss. It's parents who gave what they could.
Accountability in cases like these matters not just for the families directly affected but for every volunteer-run organization that depends on the honesty of the person holding the checkbook. When officers who abuse their authority face real consequences, it reinforces the principle that no badge and no title puts you above the law.
What remains unanswered
Several questions hang over the case. The exact amount taken beyond the "more than $50,000" threshold has not been publicly specified. It is unclear whether the NYPD was aware of the investigation before Scarlatos retired in January 2025, or whether her departure from the force was connected to the pending charges.
The Jericho Elementary School PTA has not commented publicly. Neither has the NYPD.
It also remains to be seen whether additional charges could follow. The current indictment covers a single count of second-degree grand larceny. Whether the full accounting of the missing funds could support further action is an open question as the case moves toward its 2026 court date.
Public trust is not an abstraction, it is built one volunteer shift, one fundraiser, one transparent ledger at a time. Controversies involving law enforcement figures draw intense scrutiny precisely because the public expects more from those who swear oaths.
The parents of Centereach did what communities do: they raised money for their kids' school and trusted a neighbor to manage it honestly. If the charges hold, the lesson is as old as government itself, trust without oversight is an invitation to abuse.

