Former Brockton RMV manager sentenced in road test scandal

Mia Cox-Johnson, 44, of Brockton, was accused of taking money to give customers passing scores on both the passenger vehicle driver's license and Commerical Driver's License (CDL) tests

The former manager at the Brockton RMV has been sentenced in a scheme to give permits and driver's licenses to people who did not actually pass the appropriate tests, according to the US Attorney's Office.

Mia Cox-Johnson, 44, of Brockton, was accused of taking money to give customers passing scores on both the passenger vehicle driver's license and Commerical Driver's License (CDL) tests. According to prosecutors, between December 2018 and October 2019, Cox-Johnson conspired to pass the customers in exchange for payment. The customers were told to request a paper version of the test, rather than taking it on an RMV computer.

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Cox-Johnson pled guilty back in March to extortion under color of official right and conspiring to commit extortion. On Tuesday she was sentenced to four months in prison and one year of supervised release, with the first six months under house arrest. She was also ordered to pay a $5,500 fine.

The prosecutors highlighted two separate incidents - one, on Dec. 28, 2018, when Cox-Johnson allegedly accepted $1,000 in cash to pass someone taking a learner's permit test who had previously failed it six times. In a second incident on Oct. 21, 2019, Cox-Johnson was accused of accepting $200 to pass a customer taking three tests for a CDL license, despite the fact that the driver failed one of those tests.

More than 2,000 drivers got licenses without taking road test, according to transportation officials.

Cox-Johnson was charged and pleaded guilty to two counts of extortion under color of official right and one count of conspiring to commit extortion.

The scandal at the Massachusetts RMV came to light last year. A state investigation revealed hundreds of drivers were granted licenses without having to take a road test at the Brockton Service Center.

Transportation officials said approximately 2,100 drivers were given licenses without taking a road test starting in April of 2018. They said a supervisor noticed suspicious activity in 2020. Two road test examiners and two service center employees lost their jobs over the situation. Their names were not released.

After a state investigation revealed hundreds of drivers were granted licenses without having to take a road test at the Brockton Service Center, NBC10 Boston is learning more about some of the employees who were fired as a result.

Multiple drivers who were contacted about their licenses when the scandal erupted told NBC10 Boston they didn't know why they were being considered unqualified, and said they had passed the appropriate testing.

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