BUSTED! Phyllis Lackey Charged In Running Space Coast Honor Flight Scam Since 2010

By  //  June 29, 2017

nonprofit provides trips to Washington, DC

ABOVE VIDEO: Phyllis Lackey, 57, was arrested in Brevard County on charges she pretended to represent Space Coast Honor Flight to scam donors out of funds meant for the charity organization. (WFTV image)

(WFTV) – A 57-year-old woman was arrested in Brevard County on charges she pretended to represent Space Coast Honor Flight to scam donors out of funds meant for the charity organization.

Space Coast Honor Flight sends veterans and escorts to Washington, D.C., seven times a year to visit war memorials.

Phyllis Lackey is accused of playing on that desire to help veterans to scam funds from potential Honor Flight donors.

Using the Space Coast Honor Flight name and a donation form that organization officials believe was printed from its website, Lackey would solicit cash donations for the group, deputies said.

Investigators believed Lackey could have been fraudulently collecting donations for Space Coast Honor Flight as far back as 2010.

CLICK HERE to see the entire story on WFTV.com>>>

ABOVE VIDEO: Space Coast Honor Flights SALUTES that spirit and the courage that accompanies it. The program was created in appreciation of the unassuming heroes who made incredible sacrifices in order to ensure America’s freedom.

Honors the Spirit, Courage of the Greatest Generation – Space Coast Chapter Headed By Retired Air Force Lt. Gen. William Welser

CENTRAL FLORIDA, USA – Many of them no longer walk well, those members of the Greatest Generation who can still walk at all. The passage of years have slowed them down and added the infirmities of old age to their bodies, but their spirits remain indomitable.

HONOR-FLIGHT-580-1Space Coast Honor Flights honor that spirit and the courage that accompanies it. The program was created in appreciation of the unassuming heroes who made incredible sacrifices in order to ensure America’s freedom.

The all-volunteer nonprofit provides trips to Washington, DC, free of charge to veterans who served in World War II, Korea or in between those wars.

Vets are paired with volunteer guardian escorts who help them with wheelchairs during the one-day whirlwind tour of the military monuments.

The trip from Melbourne to the Nation’s Capital makes for a long – but unforgettable – day for the vets, who gather together at around 3 a.m. at the Wickham Park Senior Center, where a bus picks them up for the trip to Orlando and a waiting crowd that cheers their arrival.

At Baltimore-Washington International Airport, another crowd welcomes with applause before a bus whisks the vets on the emotional visit to their monuments.

Everywhere they go that day, they are treated like rock stars.

Honor Flight volunteers realize time is of the essence, because according to the Department of Veterans Affairs, an estimated 640 veterans of World War II die each day.

The program was conceived by physician, pilot and retired Air Force Captain Earl Morse, who wanted to honor the veterans he had taken care of for almost three decades.

CHAPTER LEAD BY RETIRED AIR FORCE LT. GEN. WILLIAM WELSER

Many of the vets Morse treated expressed a desire to see the World War II memorial in Washington, DC, but they also admitted they lacked the physical wherewithal to complete the trip on their own and that their families did not have the financial resources to accompany them.

Under Lt. Gen. Welser’s leadership, Space Coast Honor Flight has grown from three flights per year to seven. Honor Flight is a family affair for Welser and his wife, Susan, who serves as the group’s veteran coordinator.
Under Lt. Gen. William Welser’s leadership, Space Coast Honor Flight has grown from three flights per year to seven. Honor Flight is a family affair for Welser and his wife, Susan, who serves as the group’s veteran coordinator.

Morse began organizing flights on his own out of his Ohio base.

Soon other pilots joined in. Currently, Honor Flight has 127 chapters in 41 states and has honored more than 100,000 veterans with the flight of a lifetime.

The local chapter is headed by retired Air Force Lt. Gen. William Welser, who is also chairman of the board of Habitat for Humanity.

The need for the program was apparent when Welser saw the reaction his father and father-in-law both had when visiting the Washington military monuments during a family vacation.

He signed up to become an Honor Flight guardian and has participated in more than 20 trips.

Susan Welser
Susan Welser

Under Welser’s leadership, Space Coast Honor Flight has grown from three flights per year to seven. Honor Flight is a family affair for Welser and his wife, Susan, who serves as the group’s veteran coordinator.

The local chapter has been used as a model by other Honor Flight programs in Central Florida.

The veterans’ trip costs are made possible by donations and fundraising events. Guardians are asked to pay for their own airfare and to commit to a long day escorting the vets. For them, it is well worth it.

CLICK HERE TO SEE THE CENTRAL FLORIDA HUMANITARIAN ALUMNI

CLICK HERE FOR BREVARD COUNTY NEWS