RALEIGH, N.C. – A North Carolina auditor’s report shows the head of Ferguson, Missouri schools didn’t properly account for nearly $100,000 in spending while at the helm of the Tar Heel State’s Washington County school district.

North Carolina Auditor Beth Woods issued a report Tuesday alleging former Washington County Schools Superintendent Joseph Davis misspent $15,800 in federal education funds on bounce houses at six events, the Associated Press reports.

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The report contends district employees “advised the former Superintendent to not spend program funds on entertainment,” but Davis “disregarded their advice.”

The auditor’s report also highlights $94,000 Davis allegedly spent on travel, meals and merchandise over a 33-month period without prior authorization or a documented business purpose.

“The former Superintendent spent $48,021 on hotel accommodations, airline tickets and fees, and car rental fees,” the report read. “The former Superintendent rarely provided a documented business purpose, was regularly reimbursed above the School’s per diem rates, and infrequently submitted itemized receipts. Moreover, the majority of expenditures had no evidence of prior written authorization.”

The travel included trips to 23 out-of-state and in-state destinations, often for no specified reason and without board approval, according to the report.

All of the traveling, of course, came with a heavy meal tab – $27,380 during the audit’s nearly three year time frame. The report states that Davis charged meals when meeting with staff locally and while on trips, but rarely gave a reason for the meetings.

“Another $18,800 in Davis’s spending on merchandise including Walmart gift cards, memberships and personal magazines lacked documentation showing legitimate school purposes, the report said,” according to the AP.

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Davis left his $125,000-per-year position in Washington County last year to head the Ferguson-Florissant School District, the same district where race riots erupted following the police shooting of teen criminal Michael Brown.

Davis defended his spending practices in a prepared statement.

“I have no reservations about anything I spent,” he wrote, according to the news service. “I am a man of integrity, and I stand on what I do.”

While the questionable spending is eye-opening, it’s certainly not unique among public school administrators, as EAGnews has repeatedly revealed in a long-running series of spending reports.

Some of the most recent data shows a total of 275 Seattle Public Schools employees – mostly administrators – raked in at least $100,000 in straight salary in fiscal year 2014-15. Previous reports detailed millions spent on plastic surgery for Buffalo teachers, hundreds of thousands district administrators blow on travel for “educational conferences,” massive employee cell phone bills, and countless other highly suspect expenses in school districts across the country, most with dismal student performance.