A date has been set for the criminal trial of Ray Pickles, the former executive director of the Carver, Marion, Wareham Regional Refuse Disposal District (CMWRRDD), accused of stealing over $610,000 from the District over a period of six years.
After one final pre-trial conference on February 3, the trial by jury will begin on February 24 at 9:00 am at the Plymouth County Superior Court in Plymouth.
A grand jury indicted Pickles, 85, on March 18, 2019 after a joint investigation of the Office of the Inspector General and the Attorney General’s Office.
He was charged with six counts of larceny.
Pickles, the sole signatory on two District bank accounts, allegedly wrote checks out to himself for personal use, and is accused of establishing another two secret checking accounts at two separate banks in the District’s name to deposit checks intended for the District. Pickles allegedly used those funds to make payments on his personal credit cards and make cash withdrawals for personal use.
Pickles is also accused of submitting invoices to the District for work he did not perform, as well as charging the District for fuel for his private boat.
The board that oversees the CMWRRDD filed civil charges for fraud against Pickles, his wife Diane Bondi-Pickles, 67, Pickles’ shell corporation Moss Hollow Management, and former CMWRRDD board chairman Robert Tinkham, Jr., 58, who was also the health agent for the Town of Carver.
Tinkham also faces two criminal charges of larceny and presenting a false claim for allegedly stealing $65,000 in District funds while serving as board chairman, which Pickles allegedly paid to Tinkham from phony invoices for work that Tinkham never performed.
Pickles was the executive director for the CMWRRDD for nearly 45 years since its conception in 1973. He was also executive secretary for the Town of Marion for 29 years from 1972 until his retirement in 2001, and served as the town clerk for several years until his resignation on September 3, 2019.
By Jean Perry