$15 Million Stolen From Lakewood School District and There’s Still No News about Investigation

$15 Million Stolen From Lakewood School District and There's Still No News about Investigation

LAKEWOOD, NJ – Somebody stole $15 million from the Lakewood school district earlier this year, and nearly two months after the heist, the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office remains absolutely silent.

Multiple attempts to get updates from the office have gone unanswered. At this point, nobody is talking, but millions of dollars are still allegedly ‘disappeared’.

Over a month after the reported theft of $15 million from the Lakewood Township School District’s operating accounts, a troubling silence persists from both district officials and law enforcement agencies.

The incident, which allegedly occurred over the Presidents’ Day weekend in February 2025, has left the community grappling with more questions than answers, as key details—such as the identity of the perpetrator, the method of the theft, and the status of the investigation—remain shrouded in secrecy.

This lack of transparency has fueled frustration among residents, educators, and taxpayers, particularly given the district’s already precarious financial state.

The theft was first brought to public attention by The Lakewood Scoop, which reported that $15 million had been siphoned from the district’s accounts by an unidentified third party.

Initial statements from Lakewood Mayor Raymond G. Coles confirmed the breach, noting that approximately $8 million had been recovered shortly after the incident, with efforts ongoing to retrieve the remaining $7 million.

Sources indicated that some of the stolen funds were traced out of state, while others were tracked internationally, suggesting a sophisticated operation potentially involving cybercrime or an inside job.

Beyond these early revelations, however, official updates have been scarce. The Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office, tasked with leading the investigation alongside federal, state, and local law enforcement, has consistently declined to confirm or deny any progress, adhering to a policy of not commenting on active investigations.

Similarly, the Lakewood Police Department has deferred all inquiries to the prosecutor’s office, leaving the public without a clear point of contact for updates.

$15 Million Stolen From Lakewood School District and There's Still No News about Investigation
Ai generated renderings. Grok/Dreamstime.

The Lakewood School District itself has been equally reticent. Superintendent Laura A. Winters and Board President Moshe Bender have not issued public statements addressing the theft since the initial acknowledgment, nor have they provided a timeline for when more information might be forthcoming.

District spokesman Michael Inzelbuch, typically vocal on school matters, has also remained silent, failing to respond to media inquiries from outlets like New Jersey 101.5 and the Asbury Park Press.

This lack of communication is particularly striking given the district’s recent financial lifeline—a $65 million emergency loan from the state, approved just days before the theft was reported—to avert a shutdown due to a $19 million deficit.

With the district’s total debt now approaching $200 million, the loss of even a portion of the stolen funds could have devastating consequences for staff and students, yet no official has clarified the potential impact.

The absence of information has sparked widespread speculation and concern. Community members on platforms like Reddit have questioned how such a significant sum could be stolen without immediate detection, pointing to possible vulnerabilities in the district’s financial oversight. Critics have called for a forensic audit, noting that Lakewood’s reliance on state loans—totaling $280 million since 2014—already reflects systemic fiscal challenges. The timing of the theft, coinciding with a holiday weekend, has led some to hypothesize a cyber-heist exploiting reduced monitoring, while others wonder if internal access played a role. Without official statements, these theories remain unaddressed, deepening public unease.

Compounding the issue is the broader context of Lakewood’s financial struggles. The district serves just 4,460 public school students but is mandated to provide transportation and special education services for approximately 50,000 private school students, primarily from the township’s large Orthodox Jewish community.

This unique burden, coupled with a state funding formula deemed unconstitutional by a 2023 appellate court ruling, has long strained resources. The theft of $15 million—equivalent to nearly a quarter of the recent state loan—underscores these vulnerabilities, yet the lack of transparency leaves stakeholders unable to assess whether safeguards have been implemented to prevent future losses.

The silence from authorities and the district contrasts sharply with the urgency of the situation.

In a community where trust in public institutions is already tested by years of budget shortfalls and borrowing, the failure to provide updates risks eroding confidence further.

Residents deserve clarity on how the theft occurred, who is accountable, and what steps are being taken to recover the funds and secure the district’s finances. As of April 5, 2025, more than six weeks after the incident, the absence of such information stands as a glaring gap in accountability. Until officials break their silence, the Lakewood school theft remains not just a financial crisis, but a crisis of communication—one that leaves the community in the dark about a breach that could affect its schools for years to come.