Detroit Arson Investigator's Paycheck Was Pad with Hours Not Worked, OIG Finds
An investigation by the Detroit Office of Inspector General (OIG) has uncovered a years-long scheme in which a fire lieutenant, Lt. James Hill-Harris, inflated his paychecks by submitting time sheets for hours he never worked as an arson investigator. The misconduct went unchallenged by supervisors, who failed to scrutinize Hill-Harris's overtime claims.
According to the OIG, Hill-Harris "fraudulently overstated his hours worked by more than 150 hours" using time sheets that did not match key-card activity, cellphone data, or daily logs at Detroit Public Safety Headquarters. The discrepancies date back to 2018. In some instances, investigators found Hill-Harris was at home or outside the city during hours he claimed to be on duty.
Two supervisors, Chief Dennis Richardson and Captain Rance Dixon, were also implicated in the scandal. The OIG wrote that they "abused their authority by neglecting their supervisory responsibilities," which contributed to a lack of accountability for Hill-Harris's overtime. Both men approved or allowed time submissions without the documentation required under Detroit Fire Department rules.
The investigation found that Hill-Harris claimed 622 hours of overtime in a six-month stretch between 2022 and 2023, including "43 hours of overtime in a single week." Investigators estimated he may have received more than $120,800 in income tied to hours he didn't work over a four-year span.
Hill-Harris denied committing time fraud and claimed that his father's death while fighting a deliberately set fire inspired him to become an arson investigator. However, the Michigan Commission on Law Enforcement Standards (MCOLES) stripped Hill-Harris of his certification after an investigation found evidence of egregious misconduct.
The Detroit Fire Commissioner, Chuck Simms, initially fired Hill-Harris but reversed the decision after the fire union provided additional evidence in his favor. Hill-Harris was demoted two ranks and reinstated as a firefighter.
The OIG credited the Detroit Police Department with its thorough investigation, saying it "greatly supported" their case. The department's partnership helped identify time fraud and protect integrity in city operations, according to Inspector General Kamau C. Marable.
An investigation by the Detroit Office of Inspector General (OIG) has uncovered a years-long scheme in which a fire lieutenant, Lt. James Hill-Harris, inflated his paychecks by submitting time sheets for hours he never worked as an arson investigator. The misconduct went unchallenged by supervisors, who failed to scrutinize Hill-Harris's overtime claims.
According to the OIG, Hill-Harris "fraudulently overstated his hours worked by more than 150 hours" using time sheets that did not match key-card activity, cellphone data, or daily logs at Detroit Public Safety Headquarters. The discrepancies date back to 2018. In some instances, investigators found Hill-Harris was at home or outside the city during hours he claimed to be on duty.
Two supervisors, Chief Dennis Richardson and Captain Rance Dixon, were also implicated in the scandal. The OIG wrote that they "abused their authority by neglecting their supervisory responsibilities," which contributed to a lack of accountability for Hill-Harris's overtime. Both men approved or allowed time submissions without the documentation required under Detroit Fire Department rules.
The investigation found that Hill-Harris claimed 622 hours of overtime in a six-month stretch between 2022 and 2023, including "43 hours of overtime in a single week." Investigators estimated he may have received more than $120,800 in income tied to hours he didn't work over a four-year span.
Hill-Harris denied committing time fraud and claimed that his father's death while fighting a deliberately set fire inspired him to become an arson investigator. However, the Michigan Commission on Law Enforcement Standards (MCOLES) stripped Hill-Harris of his certification after an investigation found evidence of egregious misconduct.
The Detroit Fire Commissioner, Chuck Simms, initially fired Hill-Harris but reversed the decision after the fire union provided additional evidence in his favor. Hill-Harris was demoted two ranks and reinstated as a firefighter.
The OIG credited the Detroit Police Department with its thorough investigation, saying it "greatly supported" their case. The department's partnership helped identify time fraud and protect integrity in city operations, according to Inspector General Kamau C. Marable.