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Popes enter pleas, sentencing set for January

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A former Shelter Island town justice and her husband pleaded guilty November 15 to different charges to end their embezzlement trial in Riverhead.

Prosecutors alleged that the couple stole more than $1 million over a four-year period from an elderly Water Mill woman who suffered from dementia.

According to Suffolk County District Attorney spokesman Bob Clifford, Katherine Pope pleaded guilty to fourth-degree identity theft, a misdemeanor, and her husband, Wayne, pleaded guilty to fourth-degree grand larceny, a felony. They’ll be sentenced by Judge Stephen Braslow on January 10.

The couple was indicted in August 2009, one month after the victim, Mary Abbott Estabrook, died at the age of 89. Ms. Pope was no longer on the bench at the time. Mr. Pope allegedly obtained power of attorney from the victim while he worked as a handyman in her home and wrote checks to benefit himself, according to the DA’s office.

Ms. Pope, who served as a town justice on Shelter Island from 1998 to 2002, was initially charged with first-degree grand larceny and two counts of first-degree identity theft. The ID theft charges are related to telephone transactions made in 2006, when Ms. Pope allegedly identified herself as Ms. Estabrook and liquidated more than 12,000 shares of stock, according to the prosecution.