Los Angeles Attorney Arrested on Bank Fraud Charge for Allegedly Depositing Stolen Tax Refund Check Worth over $1 Million


            LOS ANGELES – Federal tax authorities this morning arrested an attorney on bank fraud charges for allegedly depositing a stolen U.S. Treasury check for just over $1 million.

Thaddeus Julian Culpepper, 44, of South Los Angeles, was arrested this morning at his residence without incident by special agents with the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA).

Culpepper is named in a criminal complaint filed on September 27 that charges him with one count of bank fraud. The affidavit in support of the criminal complaint alleges that Culpepper deposited 21 stolen tax refund checks worth more than $1.3 million into several attorney client trust accounts.

In relation to one check for more than $1 million that he deposited into one of his client trust accounts, Culpepper allegedly told a bank representative that the payees were clients and had endorsed the check to him. Investigators have determined that Culpepper personally deposited the $1,003,814 check at a Well Fargo Bank branch in Pasadena in August 2017. “The listed payees, however, have confirmed that they never received their tax refund check, and that they do not know Culpepper,” according to the affidavit.

The affidavit outlines 20 other checks that were deposited into client trust accounts that Culpepper opened at Chase Bank and Citibank. Investigators believe that the 21 checks deposited into Culpepper’s client trust accounts were stolen from the U.S. Mail.

Culpepper is expected to make his initial court appearance in this case this afternoon in United States District Court in downtown Los Angeles.

A complaint contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in court.

            The bank fraud charge alleged in the complaint carries a statutory maximum sentence of 30 years in federal prison.

            The case against Culpepper is being investigated by TIGTA.

            This matter is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Veronica Dragalin of the Public Corruption and Civil Rights Section


The Shape of Water: Tax Disputes in the Age of Intangible Value

Water

Baker & McKenzie –

With tax disputes rising exponentially across the globe, the risk to multinational corporations is greater than ever. New research from Baker McKenzie reveals that among the Fortune 500, as much as USD 75.3 billion is currently under dispute – a figure so large it threatens to wipe out more than half of profit growth in the Fortune 500.

Our new report – The Shape of Water – Tax Disputes in the Age of Intangible Value – quantifies the increase in tax disputes and explores how companies can best manage those disputes in an increasingly digitized economy.

Based on 150 interviews with tax leaders in Fortune 500 companies, the report explores the leading causes of contention between organizations and tax authorities and examines the seismic shifts in how corporate value is defined.

Read the Report Here

About The Author