BY Brenden AckermanApril 1, 2026
1 month ago
BY 
 | April 1, 2026
1 month ago

Former Kaptur aide pleads guilty to stealing over $22,000 from the congresswoman's bank account

A former staffer to Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-OH) pleaded guilty on Tuesday to felony wire fraud after admitting she stole nearly $23,000 from the Ohio congresswoman's personal bank account to pay off her own credit card debt.

Courtney Hruska, who left Kaptur's office in 2022 to work for the Department of Agriculture, used her former boss's banking information on 10 separate occasions between August 19, 2023, and July 30, 2024, according to the Justice Department. Prosecutors said the total haul came to at least $22,865.07.

The scheme ran for more than a year before Kaptur even noticed the money was gone, the Washington Examiner reported.

A year of theft, 9% recovered

According to court filings, Kaptur had previously provided and entrusted Hruska with her personal credit card and bank account information to "make specific purchases" during Hruska's time on staff. Hruska kept that access long after she walked out the door, and long after any legitimate reason to hold it had expired.

The Department of Justice laid out the cost of that delayed discovery:

"Because more than a year had lapsed between Hruska's first fraudulent transaction and the member's discovery of the theft, the member recovered less than 9% of the stolen funds in fraud compensation."

Less than 9%. Ten fraudulent transactions over nearly a year, and the congresswoman's office apparently never flagged a single one. That's not just a failure by Hruska. It's a failure of basic financial oversight by someone who votes on how to spend trillions of taxpayer dollars.

The plea and what comes next

Hruska faces up to 20 years in prison for the wire fraud charge. Under the terms of her plea deal, she must:

  • Pay the entire amount stolen
  • Surrender her passport
  • Refrain from possessing a gun, destructive device, or other weapon

She is set to be sentenced by U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema on June 23.

Whether the sentence reflects the seriousness of the crime or serves as a slap on the wrist will say a lot. Wire fraud is a federal felony, and the breach of trust here is not incidental to the crime. It is the crime. Hruska was given access to sensitive financial information because she was trusted. She exploited that trust methodically, over months, to solve a personal financial problem at someone else's expense.

The bigger picture

This is a relatively small-dollar case in the grand scheme of Washington corruption, but the mechanics are worth paying attention to. A congressional staffer leaves government service, retains access to a member's personal financial information, and nobody on the member's side thinks to change the locks. For over a year, money walks out the door in increments, and the system designed to catch fraud recovers less than a dime on every stolen dollar.

Now scale that logic up. If a sitting congresswoman's own office cannot monitor her personal bank account closely enough to catch ten unauthorized transactions over twelve months, what confidence should taxpayers have in the federal government's ability to track billions in spending across sprawling agencies?

The answer, of course, is very little. Washington has a vigilance problem. It shows up in bloated budgets that nobody reads, in oversight committees that rarely oversee, and apparently in congresswomen who hand out their bank credentials and forget to revoke them when the staffer moves on.

Hruska deserves whatever sentence the court delivers. But the episode is also a useful reminder that trust without accountability is just an invitation. In Washington, that invitation gets accepted more often than anyone in power wants to admit.

Written by: Brenden Ackerman
Brendan is is a political writer reporting on Capitol Hill, social issues, and the intersection of politics and culture.

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