Along with former Clark County commissioners
Erin Kenny,
Dario Herrera, and several other local elected officials, Kincaid-Chauncey became embroiled in a corruption investigation involving a Las Vegas strip club which became known as
Operation G-Sting. In May 2006 Kincaid-Chauncey was convicted of
conspiracy,
wire fraud and
extortion stemming from charges that he and the other officials "used their public offices to further the interests of Michael Galardi, a strip club owner in Las Vegas. They solicited and accepted money, property, and services directly from Galardi and through co-defendant Lance Malone, another former county commissioner. The evidence demonstrated that members of the conspiracy concealed the payments they received from Galardi and failed to disclose the payments as required by law and their fiduciary duties as county commissioners." In August 2006 Kincaid-Chauncey was sentenced to 30 months in federal prison, fined $7,600 and ordered to forfeit $19,000 in assets. Although Kincaid-Chauncey's sentence was considerably lighter than Herrera's, unlike Herrera she attempted to appeal them. In January 2007 Kincaid-Chauncey began serving her sentence at the Federal Correctional Complex near
Victorville,
California, a facility she requested due to its proximity to Las Vegas. She was released in March 2009. ==References==