An Ohio National Guardsman was accused last week of claiming $$10,852 in travel costs while performing honor guard duty at 130 funerals he never attended.

Sgt. 1st Class Jason Daniel Edwards has spent his 17-year military career as a National Guardsman and funeral coordinator in the Dayton, Ohio area. He was indicted for third-degree felonies after the Ohio Inspector General (OIG) discovered that he asked for $10,852 mileage reimbursements for funerals he couldn’t possibly have attended.

For example, Edwards claimed he performed his honor guard duties at a funeral in Kettering at 10 a.m., a funeral 94 miles away in Lima at 11 a.m and then a third funeral another 90 miles away in West Alexandria at 12:30 p.m., all in one day. It doesn’t take an inspector general to know that traveling 180+ miles in just over three hours to attend three full military funerals is impossible to pull off.

Moreover, there is no witness or paper record of Edwards showing up to any of those funerals. Edwards’ defense is that he was secretly observing the other honor guards or had attended a funeral last minute without any other National Guardsmen.

Each felony can earn Edwards a maximum penalty of three years in prison and a $10,000 fine.

Here’s the breakdown of his reimbursement claims from Stars and Stripes.

From September 2013 to July 2014, investigators found Edwards claimed mileage reimbursements for 89 funerals that paperwork did not list him as attending. On another 17 funerals, he was listed as attending but claimed mileage to a funeral farther away. And 24 times he claimed reimbursement for mileage to a location where there was no funeral.

Edwards told investigators that he was receiving complaints about some of the soldiers on funeral details, so he went to the funerals and observed them covertly. He said he didn’t tell his bosses he was doing this because “It would never be authorized.”