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    Thursday, April 25, 2024

    WWII veterans' flights halted after money for D.C. trip goes missing

    Kansas City, Mo. (AP) - As many as 100 World War II veterans missed their chance to travel to Washington to see their war's memorial after about $110,000 disappeared from a Kansas nonprofit that organized free trips for them.

    Richard Foster, the president of the board for an organization that ran Central Prairie Honor Flights, fears some of the veterans will never see the National World War II Memorial. It wasn't completed until 2004, and with more than 600 World War II veterans dying daily, there is urgency to the effort to help them see the memorial.

    Central Prairie Honor Flights was the largest trip organizer in Kansas and raised nearly $1.2 million for them between 2008 and 2012. Flights were halted this year, however, after more than $100,000 disappeared from the group's account. Its program director, LaVeta Miller, was charged in October with two counts of theft by deception.

    Before the flights stopped, nearly 800 veterans made the trip from Kansas on flights chartered by the Great Bend, Kan.-based group. It pooled donations from everything from 4-H groups to children's lemonade stands to pay for the trips.

    But this spring, the group canceled two charter flights that would have transported as many as 220 more veterans. Another group called Kansas Honor Flight sprang up, but the three trips it hurriedly organized on commercial flights included less than half of the veterans who would have gone on the chartered flights.

    Miller began helping administer the Honor Flight program in April 2009 and was promoted to program manager in April 2011. In the spring, around the time the flights were canceled, Springfield, Ohio-based Honor Flight Network decided it no longer wanted the Great Bend group to help organize trips for the national network. It cited problems with reports being filed late.

    In July, Central Prairie Resource Conservation & Development, which oversaw the Honor Flights, closed its Great Bend office and fired Miller because it no longer had the money to pay her $22,000-per-year salary.

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