Just a 10-minute drive from the school, the waiter brought the table a $95 bottle of fine Syrah wine. Dimly-lit Monty’s Prime Steaks & Seafood, with its red booths and white linen, doubled as a high school meeting room that Wednesday night, Principal David Fehte says. And on many other nights.

In 2014 and 2015, Fehte, who leads El Camino Real Charter High School in Woodland Hills, charged more than $15,500 at Monty’s to his school-issued American Express card.

“When we’re doing business, we’re doing business,” Fehte said recently as he walked to his BMW in the San Fernando Valley campus parking lot.

He also paid for first-class airfare and luxury hotel rooms with his school-funded credit card.

Fehte acknowledged charging El Camino for personal travel and, after the Daily News inquired, said he reimbursed the public school.

Over the two years, Fehte charged more than $100,000 to the card, according to a Los Angeles Daily News analysis. El Camino receives about $32 million in government funds annually, accounting for 94 percent of its revenue.

“Before, I was just concerned. Now I’m angry,” said El Camino mother Marlene Widawer, who began looking into the school’s finances after hearing concerns from teachers and other parents. “Here are the people responsible for ensuring our kids are getting the best education possible, and they’re doing this?”

The school hired a financial crisis firm after the Los Angeles Unified School District first questioned the principal’s charges and those of other administrators in October 2015. Now, El Camino’s board of directors is planning to hire a forensic private investigator or auditor to review expenses. Last week, the board voted to cancel Fehte’s card and all but one of the other administrators’ credit cards.

All told, Fehte and four other administrators spent more than $1 million with their school-issued credit cards during the two years. The vast majority of charges were for typical school supplies such as textbooks, computers, sports equipment and furniture. But Fehte spent liberally with his platinum card, while sometimes paying for other people. The Daily News obtained credit card statements and preliminary account data under the California Public Records Act. The documents show that Fehte charged:

• More than $6,700 for a four-day trip to the Michigan headquarters of Herman Miller, the designer furniture manufacturer. Fehte and two other school employees flew first class and stayed in $359 hotel rooms on their journey to view classroom furniture. Herman Miller, meanwhile, has an L.A. showroom 25 miles from the school.

• Fehte, combined with other administrators, charged more than $5,700 for flowers over the two years. He sent a $75 floral arrangement with red roses to the school’s human resources manager. The note read, “Happy Birthday, Terri! Love, Dave.”

• Personal trips to Greensboro, North Carolina, and Spokane, Washington. On one of the North Carolina trips, he flew first class. On another, he charged the school nearly $800 for two nights at a hotel, including a charcuterie plate with cheese, olives and a bottle of red wine. Fehte this month acknowledged they were personal charges.

• When the school’s Academic Decathlon team traveled to Hawaii for the 2014 national championships, Fehte bought himself and assistant principal Yvonne Halski first-class tickets at $1,890 each. The rest of the school contingent flew economy.

• SEE THE RECEIPTS:

• Two of El Camino Principal David Fehte’s Monty’s meals

• Fehte’s first-class travel to Hawaii

• Charcuterie, wine and hotel in North Carolina

More oversight

In September 2015, LAUSD’s charter school division sampled some of El Camino’s checks and credit card statements and found charges that violated the school’s own policies, said L.A. Unified central business adviser Aaron Eairleywine. Fehte’s expense reports were approved by his subordinates, for instance, instead of a board member, as required by the school’s policy.

Because of the violations, the district downgraded El Camino’s financial rating from a 4 to a 1, the lowest score possible, despite the school’s healthy balance sheet. Every year, L.A. Unified ­— which oversees charter schools in its boundaries — rates charters on various measures, from governance to student achievement. Serious financial mismanagement could lead to a charter revocation, Eairleywine said. Though it hadn’t reached that point, the district ordered El Camino to quickly reform its fiscal policies. Eairleywine added that the problems may not cross any legal boundaries.

“There is nothing here that indicates they have done anything outside the law,” he said late last month. “We’re not done with the review yet, but we don’t expect it will yield anything along those lines.”

El Camino’s own auditors in November 2015 also noted the administration had significant problems with its credit card charges and expense reimbursements. But after that, Fehte continued to spend on meals and travel, the records show, albeit at a slower pace. He declined to sit down for an interview.

The school’s board of directors revised its financial handbook in December and hired more accountants in response to the district’s findings. In a written statement, the board members said they support Fehte and other administrators while they are “working to update our policies to comply with the ever-changing regulations applied to public schools.”

Board Chairman Jon Wasser wants more details about credit card expenses when submitted to the board for approval. Until at least January, the school staff presented board members with only the total amount of each card statement, with descriptions like “miscellaneous” and “Amex.” The school is operated by a nonprofit corporation called the El Camino Real Alliance, which is governed by the board of directors. They have fiduciary responsibility over the public funds.

“We are moving towards more oversight,” said Wasser, a board member since August 2014 and chairman since October. “I have what was handed to me, and I’m moving forward with changes.” El Camino Real serves about 3,900 students in the wealthy community of Woodland Hills. High performing on standardized tests, the school is perhaps best known for its seven U.S. Academic Decathlon championships. Just 18 percent of students last school year were eligible for free or reduced price meals — a common indicator of poverty — compared with 76 percent districtwide.

Personal charges

The key question about a charter school employee’s expenditures, experts say, is whether they were made for school business.

“When you use a credit card for personal use, that is a gift of public funds,” said Deborah Deal, who has audited other charter schools for a state agency and is the assistant superintendent of business services at Azusa Unified School District. “Knowing that you used it for personal purposes — that’s where it crosses the line.”

Fehte reimbursed El Camino for 13 expenses marked “personal” on monthly recaps. They totaled $3,317 over the two years, according to preliminary account data provided by El Camino. Those included purchases at Costco, a boat rental company, and a room at the Marina del Rey Marriott.

But other charges, which Fehte told a reporter were personal, showed no record of reimbursements. His Washington airfare and North Carolina lodging, food and airfare were charged in “error” to his school card, Fehte wrote.

“I should have used my personal credit card,” Fehte, 55, said in one written response. “The staff preparing my credit card recap assumed it was school-related and did not bring it to my attention.”

After this news organization asked about the expenses, school administrators said Fehte reimbursed El Camino for “inadvertent credit card charges.”

They did not provide documentation of the payments when asked. Fehte said he repaid the $95 wine purchase, a $56 charge for a rented BMW 328i, the Washington state and Greensboro airfare, and hotel bills from North Carolina and Ventura Beach.

Personal spending “is inappropriate and does not align to the purpose for the use of the public credit card,” Eairleywine wrote in a letter to the school.

Charter school administrators caught using credit cards for personal charges have faced steep consequences. In 2013, the founders of nearby Ivy Academia were found guilty of embezzlement and misappropriation of public funds for using a school American Express card to buy expensive dinners in the San Fernando Valley and other items a judge deemed unrelated to school business.

An outright prohibition on personal charges could force El Camino to discipline employees who made innocent mistakes, said Marshall Mayotte, the school’s chief business officer. So, despite the district’s protest, El Camino intends to continue allowing personal expenses to be charged but reimbursed quickly, he said.

Mayotte called the district’s scrutiny “nitpicky” and cast the situation in broader terms about charter school efficiency.

“If they have unnecessary staff, that’s not a waste of tax dollars,” he said of L.A. Unified, “but if we have one too many meals, that’s a waste of taxpayer dollars?”

Fancy dinners

Fehte, a former college basketball coach, was the state’s second-highest paid executive director or principal of a public school in 2014, according to the most recent data published by the state controller. He made $221,475 in wages.

Fehte became principal of El Camino in 2005 and led the effort to convert the school to a charter in 2011. In recent years, he worked to expand the school to other campuses but has been rebuffed by district officials.

To plan the expansion and discuss other education issues, Fehte said, he hosted dinners at restaurants such as Mastro’s Ocean Club in Malibu. All the meals were related to school affairs, Fehte maintains.

“If you want to have a business meeting on the school dime, you go to Coco’s or Denny’s or to Stonefire Grill,” said Widawer, who has a son in ninth grade and two other children who graduated from El Camino. “You go somewhere reasonable. You don’t go to extravagant meals.”

It’s up to a charter school’s board to establish guidelines for meals and other credit card expenditures, said Alice Miller, managing director of knowledge management for the California Charter Schools Association. El Camino’s fiscal policy approved in 2013 said meals while traveling should be at the “lowest rate available,” but it did not address in-town meals. The 2016 handbook does not cover the cost of in-town meals, but said travel meals could be up to $80 per day on average.

“My sniff test,” Miller said about board policies, is “how would they feel if this was the headline in the local newspaper?”

Fehte submitted meal charges without documenting who joined him, what they discussed, or how many people ordered food. School policies didn’t require it at the time. Fehte sometimes dined at Monty’s twice a week, spending an average of about $260 a meal. A handful of the Monty’s charges exceeded $500.

“Usually it’s just him and a couple other people,” said Monty’s General Manager Lee Chandler. “He’s one of our favorite customers.”

They would typically bring their own wine, Chandler said. While the state education code prohibits employees at traditional public schools from spending public funds on alcohol, the Charter Schools Act provides an exemption from the code.

Under El Camino’s 2016 financial policies, employees are required to pay for alcohol with personal funds. Also, credit card holders must submit itemized receipts and details about their meals. But documents show Fehte, through March 2016, submitted nonitemized receipts.

Flying first class

Airliners’ first-class cabins are also places to “collaborate” on school business, Fehte said. On the flight to Herman Miller, where round-trip tickets cost $930 each, he and other staff discussed a 10-year classroom renovation project, Fehte said. It was important to travel to Michigan, he added, to perform “due diligence by visiting the factory” and to work face to face with the company’s education specialists.

For a student robotics contest in Louisville, Kentucky, Fehte bought himself $2,451 of business-class and first-class airfare.

Before the school’s new fiscal policies were implemented, the handbook provided no guidance on airfare. Now, the rules stipulate flights may exceed coach prices by up to $200 each direction, and can be more expensive if the employee has a medical need. Fehte says he has a medical condition but declined to disclose its nature.

El Camino administrators say they should not be judged on particular expenses, but on the bigger picture ­— how much money they save each year. The school had $14 million in net assets last fiscal year.

“Basically, they’re saying mismanagement of funds,” said Mayotte, the chief business officer, “when we saved $4 million last year?”