A Saratoga Springs man who claimed to have a doctorate in psychology but did not has been ordered to pay $5,257 to Saratoga County.
Steven Feldman, 61, pleaded guilty to a felony charge of first-degree offering a false instrument for filing earlier this year.
He had conducted mental health evaluations for Saratoga County Family Court for five years before his arrest in 2010.
Feldman has a master’s degree and was a licensed mental health counselor, according to authorities. But he signed a contract with Saratoga County in 2009 listing himself as a psychologist with a doctoral degree. Feldman’s degree was from a mail-order degree mill and was not from an accredited college or university, the Saratoga County District Attorney’s office said at the time of Feldman’s arrest.
Saratoga County officials later recused themselves and the Clinton County District Attorney’s office prosecuted the case.
Clinton County Chief Assistant District Attorney Timothy G. Blatchley said Wednesday that Clinton County Judge Kevin K. Ryan sentenced Feldman to no jail time on Oct. 7 but ordered him to repay Saratoga County $5,257.
Saratoga County at first wanted $36,000 in restitution from Feldman for payments to him over a five-year period. The county later reduced that to $10,000 from Feldman because that is what the county had paid Feldman in a contract from October 2009 until April 2010 under the false pretense that Feldman was a psychologist, said County Attorney Stephen M. Dorsey.
Dorsey said Blatchley recommended the county accept the lower number of $5,257, keeping in mind that as part of the sentence Feldman also agreed to sign a waiver that he would not collect six pay vouchers from the county amounting to $3,800. Dorsey said this brings the restitution to nearly $10,000.
GAZETTE COVERAGE
Ensure access to everything we do, today and every day, check out our subscribe page at DailyGazette.com/SubscribeMore from The Daily Gazette:
Categories: Uncategorized