Pubdate: Thu, 17 Jul 2003 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 2003 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Contact: http://www.jsonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/265 Author: Scott Williams Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?118 (Perjury) TOP DRUG COUNSELOR FACES PERJURY CHARGE Head Of State Board Accused Of Lying About Credentials At Hearing For more than 20 years, William Olcott was a leader in setting professional standards for drug addiction counselors in Wisconsin. [SIDEBAR: William Olcott Photo/File William Olcott is accused of lying under oath about his credentials during a state administrative hearing on disciplinary action against a colleague. Quotable: The DA has the wrong impression, but I don't want to get into it.- William Olcott, former president of the Wisconsin Certification Board] As president of the Wisconsin Certification Board, Olcott had a hand in deciding who could enter the profession, what jobs they could perform and whether they were living up to a code of conduct. But now it is Olcott's conduct that is being called into question in a felony criminal case in which he is accused of claiming college degrees that he does not have. Olcott, 56, faces up to 10 years in prison if found guilty of perjury on allegations of lying under oath about his credentials during a state administrative hearing on disciplinary action against a colleague in Green Lake County. According to the criminal complaint, Olcott claimed to have a master's degree from the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay and a bachelor's degree from Indiana University - when he has no degree at all. Contacted at his home in Appleton, Olcott called the situation a misunderstanding. "The DA has the wrong impression, but I don't want to get into it," he said. Olcott declined to comment further, and his attorney, Thomas Wroblewski, did not return calls seeking comment. The perjury charge last week prompted Olcott to resign his position at the Wisconsin Certification Board. For some of the estimated 2,500 drug treatment professionals regulated by the board, the episode also has shaken their confidence in the quasi-governmental agency regarded as the ultimate authority on confronting addiction in Wisconsin. "I'm very disappointed," said newly certified Fond du Lac drug counselor Denise Gaudet. "They're accountable only to themselves. I could see how this type of thing could happen." Started with Russian trip According to a Green Lake County Sheriff's Department report, Olcott told investigators that he doctored his resume two years ago because he planned to attend a professional conference in Russia and was warned that he would lack credibility at the international gathering without a college degree. Becoming a drug treatment counselor in Wisconsin does not require a college degree, although the field has evolved over the years to a point where more than half of today's working professionals do have a degree. Olcott told investigators that he mistakenly submitted the altered resume for the Green Lake County hearing and did not realize his error until being questioned under oath about his credentials. "He only had an instant to make a decision on what to do," the sheriff's report states, "and because of embarrassment and worry about ruining his credibility, he decided to perjure himself." Olcott is a drug addiction counselor and a faculty member at Fox Valley Technical College, where he serves as chairman of the addiction studies department. College officials said his employment would be reviewed if he is convicted in the perjury case. In the Green Lake County administrative hearing in January, Olcott testified as an expert witness before an administrative law judge being asked to overturn the firing of a county drug counselor. The Wisconsin Employment Relations Commission has not yet issued a ruling in the case. Two county officials involved in the case later approached the Green Lake County district attorney's office with questions about whether Olcott had exaggerated his qualifications under oath. DA checked credentials District Attorney James Camp said he decided to file the perjury charge after checking Olcott's credentials at both UW-Green Bay and Indiana University. "He didn't have either of those degrees," Camp said. "I can prove that he perjured himself." Olcott was booked on the felony charge June 9 by the Green Lake County Sheriff's Department and was released on his own recognizance. He is due back in court Aug. 4 for a preliminary hearing. If convicted, he faces a maximum prison term of 10 years and a fine of up to $10,000. The case has stunned colleagues who describe Olcott as a respected pioneer in the field of alcohol and other drug addiction (AODA) treatment in Wisconsin. "It's a very shocking thing," said Racine drug counselor and psychotherapist Lester Higgenbottom. "He's part of that old guard," said Larry Kane, president of Wisconsin Community Mental Health Counseling Centers Inc. "He helped to create and give legitimacy to the whole AODA community." Olcott a drug board founder In the mid-1970s, Olcott was among the founders of the Wisconsin Certification Board, which certifies and regulates drug treatment counselors, clinical supervisors and prevention professionals. The board also has accredited Marquette University, Alverno College and other schools offering drug treatment curricula. Although a private organization, the certification board was created by the state in 1976 and gets $121,000 annually from the state Department of Health and Family Services. In addition to reviewing applications for certification, the volunteer 27-person board hears complaints against professionals who violate the group's code of conduct. Olcott had been a board member for more than 20 years and was serving a two-year stint as president when he resigned on Saturday. Jeff Pearcy, executive director of the Wauwatosa-based organization, said the perjury allegation against Olcott has left associates shocked. An authority with no degree? Pearcy said he called UW-Green Bay and Indiana University and was told that Olcott has no college degree from either school. Although no degree is required to serve on the certification board, Pearcy said he assumed that Olcott could not achieve so much professional success without a degree. "He's been identified as an authority," Pearcy said. "There's a certain assumption that a lot of people had made." One final irony: If convicted of perjury, Olcott could be hauled before the regulatory board that he helped to create and stripped of his professional certification. "If he's guilty of this," Pearcy said, "we're as appalled as anyone else." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin