Case Studies

When Someone Sits on
Both Sides of the Table

25 documented cases of embezzlement, self-dealing, and kickbacks โ€” each one enabled by a conflict of interest that existed before the first dollar was stolen. These aren't hypotheticals. They're convictions.

25Documented Cases
$27B+Total Losses
100%Resulted in Conviction
1Common Thread
The common thread in every case below: someone held a financial relationship โ€” often hidden โ€” with a party on the other side of a decision they controlled. The conflict existed before the fraud. In most cases, it was detectable before the first dollar went missing.
Municipal Government $53 million

Rita Crundwell

City Comptroller

City of Dixon, Illinois

For 22 years, the sole financial officer of a small Illinois city secretly transferred public funds into a private account she controlled โ€” spending the proceeds on a championship horse-breeding operation.

Energy / Corporate $30+ million (personal gain)

Andrew Fastow

Chief Financial Officer

Enron Corporation

Enron's CFO created and managed outside partnerships that transacted directly with Enron โ€” personally collecting tens of millions while sitting on both sides of those deals.

Industrial Conglomerate ~$400 million

Dennis Kozlowski

Chief Executive Officer

Tyco International Ltd.

Tyco's CEO was convicted of looting the company through unauthorized compensation, forgiven loans, and corporate funds used for personal expenses โ€” all approved through a governance structure he dominated.

Media / Cable $2.3 billion

John Rigas

Founder & Chief Executive Officer

Adelphia Communications Corporation

The founder of one of America's largest cable companies used the corporation as a family bank โ€” his sons held the key finance and operations roles, enabling $2.3 billion in undisclosed co-borrowing.

Finance / Banking $7 billion

Allen Stanford

Chairman

Stanford Financial Group / Stanford International Bank

Stanford controlled the bank that issued the investments, the advisory firm that sold them, and the entity that reported on their performance โ€” every party to the transaction answered to the same man.

Private Investment / Retail $3.65 billion

Tom Petters

Chairman & CEO

Petters Group Worldwide

Petters built a $3.65 billion scheme on fictitious purchase orders โ€” and he controlled both the supposed buyers and the supposed sellers in every transaction.

Commodities Brokerage $215 million

Russell Wasendorf Sr.

Founder & Chief Executive Officer

Peregrine Financial Group (PFG Best)

For nearly 20 years, the sole authorized signatory on his firm's customer accounts intercepted bank statements and replaced them with forgeries โ€” because he was also the only person who reviewed them.

Cryptocurrency Exchange $8+ billion

Sam Bankman-Fried

Founder & Chief Executive Officer

FTX / Alameda Research

FTX customers deposited funds into a crypto exchange whose CEO also controlled the trading firm that was secretly using those same customer funds on the other side of the market.

Pharmaceuticals $9.7 million

Gary Tanner

Head of Business Development

Valeant Pharmaceuticals International

A Valeant executive managed his company's relationship with a specialty pharmacy while secretly holding a multi-million-dollar personal stake in that same pharmacy.

Insurance $125 million

Sholam Weiss

Owner / Principal

National Heritage Life Insurance Company

After acquiring a struggling insurance company, its new owner systematically drained policyholder premiums into companies he secretly controlled โ€” leaving 35,000 policyholders without coverage.

Municipal Government $1 million+ in personal bribes

Kwame Kilpatrick

Mayor

City of Detroit, Michigan

Detroit's mayor used his office to steer city contracts to a contractor who then paid him personally โ€” collecting kickbacks from the same vendors he was awarding public business to.

Municipal Government $1.5 million+ (personal compensation fraud)

Robert Rizzo

City Manager

City of Bell, California

A city manager of a small, low-income California city quietly awarded himself a salary of $787,637 per year โ€” nearly double the President's โ€” by exploiting a governance structure in which he effectively controlled his own oversight.

Judiciary / Government $2.6 million

Mark Ciavarella

President Judge

Luzerne County Court of Common Pleas, Pennsylvania

In what became known as the "Kids for Cash" scandal, a Pennsylvania judge accepted $2.6 million in payments from the builder of a private juvenile detention facility โ€” while sentencing juvenile defendants to that same facility at rates that shocked even prosecutors.

Federal Government $2.4 million in bribes

Randy "Duke" Cunningham

U.S. Congressman

U.S. House of Representatives โ€” California 50th District

A congressman who sat on the House Intelligence and Defense Appropriations subcommittees accepted $2.4 million in bribes from defense contractors โ€” and used his committee position to direct federal contracts to those same contractors.

Federal Government $400,000+ in bribes

William Jefferson

U.S. Congressman

U.S. House of Representatives โ€” Louisiana 2nd District

An FBI search of a Louisiana congressman's freezer found $90,000 in cash โ€” proceeds from a scheme in which he leveraged congressional influence to benefit business partners who were paying him personally.

State Government $315,000 in bribes

Joseph Percoco

Executive Deputy Secretary to the Governor

New York State Executive Chamber

One of New York's most powerful state officials took a leave of absence to join the governor's re-election campaign โ€” and while ostensibly away from government, continued to exercise state influence on behalf of companies that were secretly paying him.

State Government / Legislative $300,000+ (payments to son)

Dean Skelos

New York State Senate Majority Leader

New York State Senate

New York's Senate Majority Leader used his official power to pressure companies seeking state approvals into hiring and paying his son โ€” converting legislative authority into a family income stream.

Federal Government $150,000+ in personal benefits

James Traficant

U.S. Congressman

U.S. House of Representatives โ€” Ohio 17th District

A 17-year congressman was convicted of accepting cash and personal services from local businessmen โ€” then using his congressional office and staff to benefit those same individuals and his own personal properties.

Lobbying / Professional Services $85 million (client fraud)

Jack Abramoff

Lobbyist / Managing Director

Greenberg Traurig / Signatures Restaurant

A Washington lobbyist billed multiple Native American tribal clients tens of millions of dollars for lobbying services โ€” while secretly working to undermine some of those same clients on behalf of other paying interests.

Legal / Social Security $550 million+ (fraudulent government claims)

Eric C. Conn

Managing Partner / Attorney

Eric C. Conn Law Firm

A Kentucky disability attorney grew one of the largest Social Security disability practices in the country by paying a federal administrative judge to approve his clients' cases โ€” becoming both the advocate and the behind-the-scenes funder of the judicial decisions in his favor.

Telecommunications $6 million

Walter Pavlo

Senior Manager, Collections

MCI WorldCom

A MCI finance manager responsible for collecting overdue accounts helped customers hide their delinquent debt from the company โ€” and collected personal kickbacks from those same customers in return.

Healthcare / Hospital $500 million+ (fraudulent billings)

Michael Drobot

Owner / Operator

Pacific Hospital of Long Beach

A California hospital owner built one of the largest healthcare kickback schemes on record by paying surgeons, chiropractors, and marketers for patient referrals โ€” turning the patient referral network into a personal pipeline funded by the same facility that billed for their care.

Nonprofit / Charitable Organization $1.2 million

William Aramony

President & Chief Executive Officer

United Way of America

The man who built the United Way into America's largest charity created a network of affiliated organizations โ€” which he also controlled โ€” through which he funneled donations for personal use.

Retail / Consumer Electronics $74+ million

Eddie Antar

Chief Executive Officer / Co-Founder

Crazy Eddie Inc.

The founder of a beloved New York electronics chain placed family members in every key financial role โ€” then used those relationships to systematically inflate inventory, funnel money offshore, and defraud public investors.

Information Technology / India $1.5 billion (inflated assets)

Ramalinga Raju

Chairman & Founder

Satyam Computer Services

The founder of India's fourth-largest IT company confessed to inflating the company's cash balances by $1.5 billion โ€” while simultaneously using those same fictitious resources to pursue personal real estate investments through related family entities.

A Note on Sources & Methodology

Every case on this page is based solely on information established through criminal proceedings โ€” guilty pleas, jury verdicts, or sentencing documents. Descriptions reflect what was established in court. Cases involving charges that were not proven at trial have not been included. This page is intended as an educational resource on conflict-of-interest patterns, not a commentary on individuals beyond what courts have found.

The Conflict Comes Before the Fraud

In every case above, the relationship that enabled the fraud existed โ€” and was mappable โ€” before the first dollar was misappropriated. ConflictCheck helps surface those relationships while there's still time to act.