Here it is, as promised: The court file from 6Time Financial Felon Sharon Jean Logan’s 2001 felony conviction under Penal Code section 504, Embezzlement by a Public/Private Officer, in San Bernardino County.
Click to access logan-sharon-1999-felony-embezzlement-2001-plea-fwv021176.pdf
Oops. 5Time is really 6Time.
Logan was ordered to pay $14,320 in criminal restitution to the SCS Personnel Agency. As usual, we see no evidence she paid any of it. (If she had, we’d expect the file to say something about it, like it did after Logan was garnished in jail in 2017-2018 for restitution against the two plumbing companies she committed felony grand theft against when she worked for them.)

We’re not in the mood right now to calculate 10 percent simple interest from the date of judgment and add it to Logan’s other $500k-plus unpaid restitution judgments. But we promise we’ll get around to it. Chronicling Logan’s lifetime of criminal activity, false allegations, harassment, financial irresponsibility, and other misdeeds has turned into an amazing amount of work.
Now, don’t confuse this felony with Logan’s August 28, 2000 misdemeanor embezzlement conviction/felony theft conviction case in Riverside County for stealing $250,000 from Hanover Commercial Services/Best Temporary Services and Labor Ready. Or, with her two 2003 felony convictions in Riverside County for taking money by False Pretenses from Todd Breker.
Logan was ordered to pay restitution in those cases too, and … well, you can guess what didn’t happen.
We’re only calling this Logan’s 6th financial felony because that’s the the order in which we found it. Timewise, it was Logan’s second financial felony, and her fourth financial crime overall, of a total nine money-related criminal convictions that we’ve found so far.
As you see below, Logan was sentenced to two years in prison on October 24, 2001, for this embezzlement. That’s minus 891 days she supposedly served while awaiting trial. (That may sound like a long time to be locked up pre-trial, but that’s because she was serving time for another crime.)

She was allowed to serve that sentence concurrently with any other sentence — which may mean Logan ended up doing no time for this felony embezzlement over and above what she was already serving for her embezzlement/theft conviction from Hanover Commercial Services (dba Best Temporary Services), and Labor Ready.
She was given three years for that, on August 28, 2000, and ordered to pay $160,000 criminal restitution, although the victim said she really stole $250,000 and got a civil judgment for that amount. (Logan is currently trying to discharge that in bankruptcy.)


We know Logan was out of prison by at least June 3, 2002, because that’s when she started her financial felonies against Todd Breker. So, she served less than two years of the five years to which she was sentenced.

On August 3, 2003, Logan was sentenced to two two-year terms for those felonies, for which she surrendered August 22, 2003. However, she was allowed to serve the terms concurrently, which meant it was really just two years.
She got a time-served credit of 314 days, and presumably the usual half-time for good behavior. So, Logan probably got out in early 2004.

Logan wasn’t charged with or convicted of any more financial crimes that decade (that we’ve found so far). However, she dragged two separate men — Salvador S and Mark B — into similar morasses of domestic violence allegations and restraining orders as what she previously created for her ex-husband, James Hecox. After Mark B hooked up with Logan in 2005 and hired the repeat embezzler as the bookkeeper (insert Edvard Munchian scream-face) for his skate shop, his business went bust, he was arrested several times for DV, pled guilty at least once, and ended up divorced. (We’ll tell those stories some other time. Dammit, 6Time, you’re a lot of work.)
When Logan was convicted of her most recent financial felonies in 2017 — stealing from her two employers, RSM Plumbing and Geers Plumbing in Orange County — you might expect she’d have gotten a stiff sentence, given all her previous thefts and embezzlements. But, no, she was given 90 days in county jail, which she was allowed to serve weekends-only.
We can almost kind of see why Logan treats her extensive, felonious criminal history as no big deal. That’s how the justice system treats it.

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