Embezzlement investigations often begin before criminal charges are filed. An internal audit, accounting discrepancy, missing funds, employee complaint, subpoena, search warrant, request for financial records, or contact from investigators may indicate that an employer, organization, or law enforcement agency is examining the alleged misuse of money, property, or business assets.
Levenson Law Firm represents employees, executives, business owners, financial professionals, fiduciaries, and other individuals facing serious Pennsylvania state and federal embezzlement investigations and prosecutions throughout Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania.
Embezzlement cases frequently involve extensive bank records, accounting documents, expense reports, payroll records, invoices, electronic communications, witness testimony, and digital evidence. Effective criminal defense begins with examining the client’s authority, the purpose of the transactions, what the records actually show, and whether the prosecution can prove criminal intent.
Criminal charges begin with allegations. Effective criminal defense begins with understanding what the evidence proves—and what it does not.
From there, we develop a legal strategy tailored to the facts, the law, and the individual client.
The strategy depends on the case. The commitment does not.
Embezzlement generally refers to allegations that a person lawfully obtained access to money, property, or other assets because of employment, a fiduciary relationship, a position of trust, or another authorized role, but later converted, transferred, concealed, retained, or used those assets without authorization.
Unlike theft allegations involving property allegedly taken without initial permission, embezzlement cases often arise when the accused had legitimate access to the funds or property. The dispute frequently concerns whether particular transactions were authorized, how the assets were used, and whether the accused acted with criminal intent.
Depending on the allegations, Pennsylvania prosecutors may pursue charges involving theft, theft by failure to make required disposition of funds, misapplication of entrusted property, receiving stolen property, forgery, access-device fraud, or related financial offenses.
Federal prosecutors may pursue charges when the alleged conduct involves federal funds, federally regulated institutions, employee-benefit plans, interstate transactions, government programs, or related federal fraud offenses.
Not every unauthorized expense, disputed reimbursement, accounting error, business disagreement, or violation of company policy constitutes criminal embezzlement. The prosecution must prove each element of the charged offense beyond a reasonable doubt.
Embezzlement investigations may involve allegations such as:
The specific charge depends on the nature of the relationship, the source and ownership of the property, the accused person’s authority, the amount involved, and whether the matter is prosecuted in Pennsylvania state court or federal court.
An embezzlement investigation may begin after an internal audit, accounting review, employee report, business dispute, whistleblower complaint, insurance claim, discovery of missing funds, or review of unusual financial transactions.
Employers or organizations may conduct an internal investigation before contacting law enforcement. During that process, they may examine records, interview employees, restrict access to accounts, preserve electronic devices, or demand an explanation from the person suspected of misconduct.
Investigators may seek:
Early legal guidance can be important before responding to an employer, participating in an internal interview, producing records, signing a statement, or speaking with law enforcement.
An internal investigation may quickly become a criminal investigation. Statements made to an employer, corporate investigator, auditor, insurer, licensing body, or outside counsel may later be provided to law enforcement or prosecutors.
Internal investigators may ask the accused person to explain transactions, surrender devices, provide passwords, sign written statements, or repay disputed amounts. Those requests can have serious legal consequences.
Employment, civil, licensing, and criminal issues may overlap. A defense strategy should account for how decisions made in one proceeding may affect another.
Many embezzlement allegations are prosecuted under Pennsylvania theft or financial-crime statutes. Federal prosecution may arise when the alleged conduct concerns federal funds, federally insured financial institutions, employee-benefit plans, government programs, interstate communications, or related federal crimes.
Federal embezzlement allegations may also be charged together with offenses involving:
The applicable procedures, discovery rules, sentencing considerations, and potential penalties differ significantly between Pennsylvania state court and federal court.
The elements depend on the offense charged. In general, the prosecution may attempt to prove that the accused had possession of or authority over money or property belonging to another person or organization and intentionally converted, transferred, concealed, or used it without lawful authorization.
Important issues may include:
Possession of financial access, involvement in bookkeeping, or responsibility for company funds does not by itself establish theft or criminal intent.
Embezzlement prosecutions often depend on financial summaries, spreadsheets, accounting reports, bank records, and transaction analyses prepared by an employer, investigator, or forensic accountant.
Those materials should be reviewed carefully to determine:
Financial summaries may reflect the investigator’s theory without establishing the underlying facts. The defense must examine the original records and the context in which the transactions occurred.
Employers and investigators may rely on accounting-system logins, email records, device information, access logs, digital approvals, electronic signatures, or banking credentials to attribute transactions to a particular person.
Depending on the circumstances, the defense may examine:
A record showing that a transaction occurred does not necessarily establish who authorized it, why it occurred, or whether it was fraudulent.
Investigators may seek evidence through search warrants, subpoenas, employer-provided records, cellphone extractions, computer searches, surveillance, or interviews.
Potential issues may include:
Evidence obtained unlawfully may be subject to suppression or exclusion depending on the circumstances.
The appropriate defense depends on the facts, the available evidence, the client’s authority, and the stage of the investigation or prosecution.
Potential issues may include:
Every embezzlement case requires careful analysis of the financial records, company practices, client authority, witness accounts, and complete history of the disputed transactions.
Repayment does not necessarily prevent criminal charges or establish that the accused committed a crime. It may, however, affect negotiations, restitution, mitigation, sentencing, or the position of the alleged victim.
A decision about repayment should be made carefully and with legal advice. An attempted payment or written acknowledgment may be interpreted as an admission, even when the accused disputes criminal intent or the amount claimed.
An embezzlement conviction may result in imprisonment, probation or supervised release, fines, restitution, forfeiture, and other criminal penalties. The potential sentence may be affected by the alleged loss, the number and duration of the transactions, the accused person’s role, any alleged abuse of trust, and related charges.
Embezzlement allegations may also affect:
Because criminal, civil, employment, financial, and professional consequences may overlap, the defense strategy should consider the full range of risks from the beginning of the investigation.
Embezzlement investigations may involve allegations of other Pennsylvania or federal offenses, including:
The presence of multiple allegations may affect the complexity of the case, the potential sentencing exposure, and the strategy required.
Clients work directly with Amy Jones throughout the representation. Levenson Law Firm intentionally maintains a limited caseload so that each matter receives the time, preparation, and individualized attention serious embezzlement and financial-crime cases require.
We begin by examining the prosecution’s theory, reviewing the available financial, accounting, documentary, and electronic evidence, identifying legal and factual issues, and understanding the client’s authority and objectives.
Depending on the case, representation may include advising a client during an internal or criminal investigation, preparing for employer or law-enforcement interviews, responding to subpoenas or document demands, challenging searches or financial evidence, communicating with prosecutors, preparing for trial, negotiating an appropriate resolution, or developing a sentencing and mitigation strategy.
No lawyer can honestly promise a particular result. What we can promise is careful preparation, sound professional judgment, candid advice, and individualized representation throughout every stage of the case.
The strategy depends on the case. The commitment does not.