Federal White Collar Crime Defense Lawyers discussing case

Federal White Collar Crime Defense Lawyer

Monument Legal defends executives, professionals, and business owners against federal fraud, wire fraud, bank fraud, healthcare fraud, and money laundering charges in U.S. District Courts nationwide from investigation through trial and appeal.

Facing federal white collar crime charges can feel like the ground has dropped out from under you. One day you are running a business or managing finances. The next, federal agents are at your door or a letter arrives saying you are under investigation. The fear of losing everything you have built is real. So is the path forward.

Criminal Defense Case Results

Reduction of Charges

Federal Felony Credit Card Fraud

International client charged with 100 Counts of Federal Felony Credit Card Fraud wherein he was alleged to have stolen over 100 credit card numbers over the Internet resulting in a cumulative of over $1.5 million dollars of fraudulent charges against the victims cards. Client was facing up to 50 years imprisonment if convicted on these charges. We agreed to cooperate with the government in their ongoing investigations related to the matter and the government agreed to offer a plea where the client would plead only to two federal felony charges and serve only a total of 36 months in prison.

Favorable Resolution

Federal Felony Medicaid and Medicare Fraud

Our client faced charges in a large Medicaid and Medicare fraud case alleging hundreds of millions in proceeds. We delivered strategic defense advocacy, achieving a favorable resolution.

Non-Jail Time Plea

Federal Felony COVID Relief Fund Fraud

Our client faced substantial federal fraud charges for the misuse of COVID relief funds, carrying the threat of multiple years in prison. Monument Legal expertly negotiated a critical plea agreement that avoided any jail time, instead resulting in probation and a limited restitution payment, allowing our client to avoid incarceration.

Defending Against Federal White Collar Crime

At Monument Legal, we defend professionals and business owners against federal white collar charges nationwide. Whether you have received a target letter, a grand jury subpoena, or have already been indicted, you have options. Call now for a free, completely confidential consultation.

Our defense work has resulted in dismissed charges, reduced charges, non-prosecution agreements, and sentences well below federal guidelines. We are members of the NACDL and are admitted to practice in multiple U.S. District Courts. Every consultation is protected by attorney-client privilege from the moment you call.

What Makes Federal White Collar Charges Different

Federal white collar investigations are conducted by the FBI, IRS Criminal Investigation Division, the SEC, and the DOJ Fraud Section, agencies with far greater resources than state investigators. These investigations often run for one to three years before a single charge is filed. By the time federal agents contact you, they may already have a substantial case.

You may first learn you are under investigation when agents request a voluntary interview, when your business receives a grand jury subpoena, or when you receive a target letter from the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Any of these signals should prompt you to call a federal defense attorney before you say or produce anything.

The most important things to understand:

  • There is no parole in the federal system. You will serve at minimum 85 percent of any sentence imposed.
  • Loss amount drives your sentence. Federal sentencing under U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Chapter 2B1.1 adds levels based on the dollar amount of the alleged loss, a larger loss figure means a dramatically higher recommended sentence.
  • Federal jurisdiction attaches broadly. What makes a fraud charge federal rather than state is usually the involvement of wire communications, the U.S. mail, federally insured financial institutions, or interstate commerce.

Types of Federal White Collar Cases We Handle

One of the most broadly charged federal statutes. Covers any scheme to defraud using electronic communications, including email, phone calls, and online transactions. Used across business disputes, investment dealings, and insurance claims.

Mirrors wire fraud but applies when U.S. mail or private carriers like FedEx are used. Frequently charged alongside wire fraud in the same indictment.

Alleged schemes to defraud a federally insured financial institution. Includes mortgage fraud, loan application fraud, and check kiting. Carries penalties of up to 30 years per count.

Covers alleged market manipulation, insider trading, Ponzi schemes, and false statements to investors. Often investigated jointly by the FBI and SEC, with parallel criminal and civil proceedings.

Aggressively prosecuted by the DOJ. Covers false billing to Medicare, Medicaid, or private insurers. Physicians, administrators, billing companies, and pharmacy owners are common targets.

Investigated by the IRS Criminal Investigation Division. Can stem from underreporting income, filing false returns, failing to file, or concealing offshore assets.

Frequently added on top of underlying fraud charges. Involves allegations that proceeds from criminal activity were concealed or transferred through financial transactions.

We handle the full range of federal white collar offenses, including PPP loan fraud and COVID-19 relief fraud, which remain an active federal enforcement priority.

Federal Sentencing: How Loss Amount Affects Your Case

Alleged Loss Amount Guideline Level Increase Example Impact
  • $6,500 – $15,000
  • +2 levels
  • Modest increase to guidelines range
  • $150,000 – $250,000
  • +10 levels
  • Significant prison time likely
  • $1.5M – $3.5M
  • +16 levels
  • Substantial federal prison sentence
  • $25M – $65M
  • +22 levels
  • Decade or more in federal prison
  • Over $550M
  • +30 levels
  • Maximum guidelines ranges apply

 

Source: U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Chapter 2B1.1. Not legal advice.

Beyond prison time, a federal white collar conviction also means restitution orders, civil asset forfeiture, substantial fines, loss of professional licenses (in medicine, law, finance, accounting, and real estate), a permanent bar from serving as a corporate officer or director, and for non-citizens, potential deportation.

How We Defend Federal White Collar Cases

We review what you know about the investigation, assess the likely theory of prosecution, and identify your immediate exposure.

If you have not yet been charged, this is often the most important phase. We can engage with the U.S. Attorney’s Office on your behalf, challenge the government’s theory, and in some cases persuade prosecutors to decline charges entirely or pursue a civil resolution. This window does not stay open forever, early engagement matters.

We advise on what must be produced, what is protected by privilege, and how to assert your Fifth Amendment rights appropriately.

Federal fraud charges require proof that you acted willfully and with criminal intent. We examine whether conduct resulted from mistake, business judgment, reliance on professional advice, or misunderstanding rather than deliberate deception.

Loss amount drives sentencing more than almost any other factor. We scrutinize calculations for overreach, methodological errors, and amounts that do not reflect actual or intended harm.

We pursue non-prosecution agreements, deferred prosecution agreements, or plea agreements that reduce exposure. If your case goes to trial, we bring aggressive, evidence-based courtroom defense.

Your Rights During a Federal Investigation

You have constitutional rights from the moment you become the subject of a federal investigation.

Do not answer questions from FBI, IRS-CI, or SEC investigators. Politely state that you want to speak with an attorney before answering any questions.

An attorney must review it before anything is produced. Some materials may be privileged, and producing privileged materials or destroying subpoenaed documents both carry serious consequences.

It is not an invitation to explain yourself. Contact a defense attorney before responding.

Once you are aware of an investigation, destroying or altering documents can result in separate obstruction of justice charges.

Frequently Asked Questions

A target letter is formal notice from the U.S. Attorney’s Office that you are a target of a federal grand jury investigation, meaning prosecutors currently believe you may have committed a federal crime. Do not respond to the letter, call the prosecutor, or produce any documents on your own. In some cases, counsel retained at this stage can engage with prosecutors before any charges are filed and influence whether an indictment issues at all. Call Monument Legal immediately.

No. Federal investigators are trained interviewers. Even if you believe you have done nothing wrong, statements made without counsel can be taken out of context or lead to charges of making false statements to federal agents under 18 U.S.C. § 1001, a separate federal crime regardless of whether the underlying conduct was criminal.

Prison is a real possibility and must be taken seriously. That said, many outcomes short of trial including non-prosecution agreements and below-guidelines plea agreements are possible with effective defense counsel. Federal judges also have discretion to sentence below guidelines in appropriate cases. Call us to discuss your specific situation honestly.

A proffer agreement, sometimes called a “queen for a day” agreement, allows you to speak with prosecutors in exchange for limited use immunity. Your specific statements generally cannot be used directly against you, but the government can still use independently gathered evidence. A cooperation agreement goes further: in exchange for substantial assistance, prosecutors may file a motion allowing a sentence below any applicable mandatory minimum. Both carry significant risks and should never be entered without experienced federal defense counsel.

Yes. Charges can be dismissed when evidence is suppressed, when the government cannot prove intent, or when pre-indictment advocacy persuades prosecutors to decline to file. Charges can be reduced through plea negotiations that reflect mitigating facts or cooperation. Every case deserves a defense that pursues every available avenue.

Federal white collar investigations can run one to three years before charges are filed. Once charged, cases typically take 18 to 36 months to resolve through plea or trial. The complexity of financial evidence involved typically makes these cases longer than average federal criminal matters.

  • Mail and Wire Fraud: Using mail or electronic communications to defraud someone.
  • Mortgage Fraud: Deceiving lenders to obtain a loan.
  • Health Care Fraud: Billing for services not rendered or providing substandard care for profit.
  • Insurance Fraud: Filing false claims with insurance companies.

Federal embezzlement occurs when someone entrusted with handling government funds or property steals or misuses those resources for personal gain. It is a serious crime because it breaches the public’s trust and diverts resources away from important government functions.

Here’s a breakdown of what constitutes federal embezzlement:

  • Perpetrator-Victim Relationship: There must be a trust or fiduciary relationship between the perpetrator and the government. This means the person was entrusted with the money or property and had a legal duty to handle it responsibly.
  • Type of Property: The embezzled property must be something of value that belongs to the federal government. This can include money, equipment, documents, or even things like government-issued materials used to counterfeit money.
  • Fraudulent Intent: The perpetrator must have acted with the intention of depriving the government of the rightful use of the property. Simply losing or accidentally damaging the property wouldn’t be considered embezzlement.
  • Federal Jurisdiction: The crime must have involved federal funds or property to be considered a federal offense. Embezzlement of state or local government funds would be prosecuted on a state level.

Federal money laundering involves processing illegally obtained money to make it appear legitimate. This is a federal crime because it undermines law enforcement efforts and allows criminals to benefit from their wrongdoings.

The common features of Federal money laundering include:

  • Dirty Money In – Clean Money Out: The core purpose is to disguise the source, ownership, and nature of funds derived from criminal activity.
  • Process of Laundering: Money laundering typically involves three stages:
  • Placement: Introducing the “dirty money” into the financial system. This might involve breaking large sums into smaller deposits or using businesses like car washes or restaurants known for handling a lot of cash.
  • Layering: Moving the money through a series of complex financial transactions to create distance between the illegal source and the laundered funds. This could involve using shell companies, wire transfers, or foreign exchange.
  • Integration: Re-entering the laundered money back into the legitimate economy. This could involve making investments, buying real estate, or using the money to fund seemingly legitimate businesses.

Money Laundering is a Federal crime if you use a bank or other financial institution to launder money that originated from a federal crime (like drug trafficking or fraud) regardless of the amount. Money Laundering is also a Federal crime when it involves more than $10,000 in any one transaction derived from any illegal activity, even a state crime.

Federal bribery occurs when someone offers, gives, or solicits anything of value to influence a public official in the performance of their duties. It’s a serious crime that undermines the integrity of government and erodes public trust.

The key elements of federal bribery include:

  • The Offeror: The person who offers, gives, or solicits the bribe. It’s a crime to either offer or accept the bribe.
  • The Public Official: Someone who holds a position in the federal government and has the authority to influence decisions or take actions. This can include elected officials, appointed officials, and even some government employees.
  • The Benefit: The offeror provides something of value to the public official. This can include money, gifts, campaign contributions, or even promises of future benefits like jobs or contracts. Federal bribery applies regardless of the value of the thing offered or given.
  • Quid Pro Quo: There must be an intention to influence the official act of the public official. This means a bribe is offered in exchange for a specific action or inaction by the official in their government role. It can be something as blatant as a cash payment in exchange for a favorable vote on a bill, or something more subtle like offering free travel to a conference in exchange for overlooking safety violations in a company the official regulates.

There must be proof of intent to influence an official act. Simply giving a gift to a public official wouldn’t be considered bribery if there’s no expectation of something in return.

Federal identity theft occurs when someone uses another’s personal identifying information without their permission for illegal purposes. Federal law enforcement takes identity theft very seriously and there are specific laws that address it.

Examples of Federal Identity Theft include:

  • Using another’s Social Security number to get a job or open a new bank account.
  • Using another’s credit card information to make unauthorized purchases online.
  • Filing a tax return using another’s Social Security number to claim a fraudulent refund.

To prove that Federal Identity Theft occurred, the prosecutor must show that the perpetrator used another’s name or other identifying information like Social Security number, driver’s license number, or financial account numbers.

The prosecutor must also show that the perpetrator used the information with the intention of committing some kind of crime or fraud. This could involve opening new accounts, making unauthorized charges, or filing fraudulent tax returns.

For federal charges to apply, identity theft act must cross state lines or involve electronic communication such as using the internet or phone.

Federal defense for white collar crimes

Consult with a Federal White Collar Crimes Lawyer

Federal white collar charges threaten everything you have worked for: your career, your reputation, your freedom, and your family’s future. You do not have to face this alone. Call now for a free confidential consultation protected by attorney-client privilege from your first word.

Contact our criminal defense attorneys to discuss your white collar crime case. Available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.