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An election commissioner in Mississippi's largest county has pleaded guilty to fraud and embezzlement charges related to misuse of pandemic relief money from a group funded by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.

Hinds County Election Commissioner Toni Johnson, 37, of Clinton, entered the guilty plea Monday as jury selection was beginning for her trial, court records show. She will have to resign and will no longer be able to serve in any office handling public money, according to the state auditor's office.

Johnson was chairwoman the Hinds County Election Commission in 2020 and 2021. According to the state auditor’s office, she used COVID-19 response money from the Center for Tech and Civic Life to buy two 85-inch televisions and personal protective equipment, which she purportedly had delivered to her own home and one other private home.

COVID RELIEF FUNDS SPENT ON ROADS, BUILDINGS, SEAWALLS

Election official pleads guilty to misusing pandemic money

Mississippi's election official, Toni Johnson has pleaded guilty to fraud and embezzlement from misusing pandemic relief money. She will have to pay back over  $24,000 in restitution.

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The auditor said that to conceal the scheme, Johnson allegedly bought smaller, less expensive TVs as replacements for the larger ones bought by the Hinds County Election Commission.

In the plea deal, Johnson is expected to avoid prison time. Court records show prosecutors will recommend a 20-year sentence, with 15 of those years suspended and five to be spent under supervised probation. Johnson will have to pay restitution of more than $24,000.

Two other people previously pleaded guilty to charges in this case in Hinds County, including bribery of a public official and conspiracy to make fraudulent statements to the government. They await sentencing.