Defense for Fraud: Defending Professionals (Doctors, Lawyers, CPAs) in Fraud Cases

Published: 07/07/2026

by: Adam M. Ashby

Facing fraud charges can be one of the most daunting challenges a licensed professional—whether a doctor, lawyer, or CPA—might encounter. Fraud is a serious criminal offense that can result in severe penalties within the criminal justice system, including asset forfeiture if assets are linked to alleged criminal activity. These allegations not only threaten your freedom but also put your entire career and professional reputation at risk. An arrest by police or other authorities can have immediate consequences for a professional’s license and reputation. At JacksonWhite Attorneys at Law, we understand the high stakes involved and are dedicated to providing aggressive, knowledgeable defense for professionals navigating complex state and federal fraud investigations.

Fraud charges against licensed professionals often stem from complicated billing practices, accounting judgments, or regulatory gray areas rather than clear-cut theft. Investigators, including police, act with legal authority to gather evidence and initiate proceedings. Successfully defending these cases requires a deep understanding of both criminal law and the unique regulatory environments governing each profession. Hiring an experienced attorney to act on your behalf is crucial to navigating the criminal justice system and achieving the best possible outcome in your case. Our experienced criminal defense team focuses on early intervention, thorough investigation, and tailored strategies to protect your rights, your license, and your future. If you are under investigation or facing fraud allegations, securing skilled legal counsel promptly can make all the difference.

Understanding Fraud Charges Against Licensed Professionals

When prosecutors target professionals, they’re not usually dealing with obvious theft or embezzlement. Instead, professional fraud cases typically involve gray areas of judgment, documentation, or billing that get recharacterized as intentional deception. A doctor’s coding decisions, a lawyer’s trust account transfers, or a CPA’s tax positions can all become the subject of criminal scrutiny—even when the professional believed they were acting appropriately.

Common Arizona and federal fraud charges affecting professionals include:

  • Health care fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1347 (submitting false claims to Medicare, Medicaid, or private insurers)
  • Wire and mail fraud under 18 U.S.C. §§ 1343 and 1341 (using electronic or postal communications in fraud schemes)
  • Insurance fraud under A.R.S. § 20-463 (making false statements to obtain insurance benefits)
  • Securities fraud (misrepresentations in financial transactions or investment schemes)
  • Tax fraud and false statement violations involving the Internal Revenue Service, which can impact taxes for individuals and society
  • Money laundering charges when alleged fraud proceeds move through financial institutions
  • Violations of statutes and regulations, including administrative codes or licensing requirements

Fraud schemes can be categorized as first-party fraud, second-party fraud, or third-party fraud. Common types of fraud include identity theft, credit card fraud, embezzlement, and mail fraud.

For licensed professionals, a fraud allegation almost always triggers a parallel process. While the criminal investigation proceeds, you may simultaneously face:

  • Civil or regulatory audits from payers, the government, or oversight agencies
  • Professional disciplinary investigations by the Arizona Medical Board, State Bar of Arizona, or Board of Accountancy
  • Hospital credentialing reviews or employer investigations
  • Private payer recoupment demands

The prosecution must still prove the classic fraud elements—material misrepresentation, knowledge, intent to deceive, reliance, and loss—but they often try to infer these elements from patterns in billing codes, charting practices, trust account records, or financial statements. The government alleges that the defendant committed fraudulent acts, often for personal gain, but what looks like a pattern to investigators may simply reflect your specialty focus, practice style, or reasonable professional judgment. Defendants in these cases should understand that fraud, such as manipulating financial statements or exploiting procurement processes, is typically alleged to benefit the accused personally. Understanding common defenses is crucial for protecting defendants’ rights and navigating the legal process effectively. In financial statement fraud, some professionals may engage in misrepresenting profits to deceive stakeholders or benefit themselves.

Even before formal charges, interviews by investigators from agencies like the FBI, HHS-OIG, IRS-CI, Arizona Attorney General’s Office, or licensing boards are a sign to contact counsel immediately. The importance of consent in searches or interviews cannot be overstated—never agree to searches or questioning without understanding your rights. Stop providing informal “explanations” without a criminal defense lawyer present—statements made during these early encounters can become the foundation of the prosecution’s case.

Core Legal Defenses in Professional Fraud Cases

Core Legal Defenses in Professional Fraud Cases

While every case is unique, there are recurring defense themes that criminal defense attorneys use to protect professionals accused of fraud. Understanding common defenses—such as negating intent to deceive, arguing a mistake of fact, claiming immateriality of misrepresentation, and proving coercion or entrapment—is crucial for anyone facing fraud charges. The government bears the burden to prove each element beyond a reasonable doubt, including that any false information was material enough to influence the victim’s decision, and skilled defense lawyers know how to expose weaknesses in the prosecution’s theory.

Lack of Intent to Defraud

Fraud is an intent crime. The government must prove that you acted with specific intent to deceive and obtain money or property through deception. This is where most cases for professionals are won or lost.

  • Professionals routinely rely on staff, billing vendors, or third-party software to handle claims submissions and coding
  • Honest mistakes, coding errors, or miscommunications rarely satisfy the “willful” standard required for criminal fraud
  • The absence of concealment—transparent billing practices, open communication with payers—undermines claims of fraudulent intent
  • Evidence of compliance training, internal audits, and corrective actions demonstrates a culture oriented toward lawful conduct

Good-Faith Professional Judgment

For doctors, treatment decisions and medical necessity are often matters of legitimate clinical debate. For lawyers, strategy and settlement decisions may be second-guessed by unhappy clients. For CPAs, reasonable accounting methods or tax positions can differ substantially without crossing into fraud.

A person exercising good-faith judgment based on their training and experience is not committing fraud—even if regulators or payers later disagree with their decisions.

Insufficient or Unreliable Evidence

Defense counsel systematically challenges the prosecution’s evidence:

  • Question sampling methods used in health care audits
  • Challenge statistical extrapolations from small samples to millions in alleged losses
  • Expose incomplete financial records or inconsistent witness testimony
  • Highlight testimony from disgruntled employees or former clients who may have motives to lie
  • Demonstrate that key allegations lack corroboration from independent documents or data

Absence of Knowledge

Executives, partners, or practice owners are sometimes accused of fraud merely because of their role in an organization. A strong defense can show:

  • The accused person was never told key facts about the alleged scheme
  • Critical documents were never seen or signed by the defendant
  • Reasonable reliance on compliance teams, billing staff, or outside professionals was appropriate given the circumstances

Improper Investigative Tactics

The United States Constitution protects individuals from unlawful searches and seizures, coerced statements, and other government overreach. Defense strategies often include:

  • Challenging warrants that were overly broad or lacked probable cause
  • Moving to suppress evidence obtained through unlawful searches of offices, computers, or email accounts
  • Arguing that statements were obtained without proper Miranda warnings during custodial interviews
  • Protecting attorney-client privilege when investigators seize documents from law offices

Other Classic Defenses

Depending on the facts, additional defenses may apply:

  • Duress or coercion by a superior or business partner
  • Mistaken identity in large-scale schemes involving multiple accused persons
  • Lack of victim reliance or actual loss (some statutes require proof of harm)
  • Statute of limitations problems for older billing or accounting periods
  • Entrapment in cases involving government sting operations

Building a Defense Strategy for Doctors Accused of Fraud

Physicians and other health care providers in Arizona face a unique set of fraud allegations. The most common involve healthcare fraud, Medicare/Medicaid fraud, upcoding, unbundling, billing for services not rendered, and Stark Law or Anti-Kickback Statute violations.

Independent Record Review

Independent Record Review

An experienced criminal defense attorney will perform their own investigation of medical records, CPT/HCPCS codes, and billing patterns. This review often reveals that:

  • Services were medically necessary based on documented patient conditions
  • Coding was properly supported by clinical documentation
  • Auditors mischaracterized standard practice patterns as fraud schemes
  • The government’s theory relies on cherry-picked examples rather than the full picture

Reliance on Coders and Billing Staff

Many doctors delegate coding and claim submissions in good faith to certified professionals and compliance vendors. When billing errors occur, they may reflect:

  • Staff mistakes rather than physician direction
  • EHR system defaults that the physician never personally reviewed
  • Training gaps in third-party billing companies
  • Miscommunication about coding guidelines that changed over time

Demonstrating this delegation undermines claims of personal intent to commit fraud.

Contesting Audit Methodologies

Government agencies and private payers increasingly use data analytics to flag “outlier” providers. Defense counsel can challenge:

Audit IssueDefense Approach
Sample selectionShow the sample was not representative or was biased
Extrapolation methodsChallenge projecting small samples to millions in alleged losses
Lack of patient contextDemonstrate that patient complexity, comorbidities, or specialty focus explain patterns
Evolving standardsProve that coding rules changed or were ambiguous during the relevant period

Regulatory Overlay

A doctor facing federal charges must also manage Arizona Medical Board or Osteopathic Board investigations, hospital peer review, and credentialing consequences. Statements made in these proceedings can be used in the criminal case, so coordination between defense strategies is essential.

Collateral Consequences

A complete defense strategy addresses outcomes beyond the criminal case:

  • Potential exclusion from Medicare/Medicaid (which can end a medical career)
  • NPDB (National Practitioner Data Bank) reporting that follows you to every new credentialing application
  • Loss of hospital privileges and managed care contracts
  • Immigration consequences for non-citizen physicians

Negotiated resolutions may aim to avoid outcomes that mandate exclusion or allow for future reinstatement.

Defense Considerations for Lawyers Accused of Fraud

Attorneys may face fraud allegations related to client trust accounts, settlement funds, billing practices, misrepresentation to courts, or participation in investment or real-estate schemes with clients. Lawyers may also face allegations related to mortgage fraud, which can involve falsification of information to obtain loans or benefits, and procurement fraud, which can occur when employees collude with suppliers to defraud a company. These cases often arise from client complaints, fee disputes, or adverse outcomes in underlying litigation. In court proceedings involving fraud allegations against lawyers, the judge plays a critical role in issuing warrants, making rulings on defendant appearances, and ultimately determining the outcome of the case.

Reconstructing Trust Account Records

The defense often begins with a detailed forensic review of:

  • Trust account ledgers and bank statements
  • Firm accounting systems and bookkeeping practices
  • Client communications authorizing disbursements
  • Fee agreements and cost disclosures

This reconstruction can show that transfers were authorized, properly documented, and consistent with ethical rules rather than intentional misappropriation. Apparent “shortages” may be temporary timing issues that were corrected when discovered.

Ethical Ambiguity and Good-Faith Interpretation

Fee arrangements, contingency settlements, and billing for complex matters can be reasonable even if later disputed by clients or co-counsel. The defense can demonstrate:

  • Written fee agreements that disclosed the arrangement
  • Industry-standard practices for handling multi-party settlements
  • Good-faith interpretation of ethics rules in novel situations
  • Absence of concealment or deceptive intent

Protecting Privilege

When a lawyer is under investigation, protecting attorney-client privilege and work product is paramount. Counsel must:

  • Assert privilege when responding to subpoenas or search warrants
  • Challenge overbroad searches that sweep up client files unrelated to the investigation
  • Ensure that any review of seized materials complies with privilege safeguards
  • Manage document production so that defending the lawyer does not expose clients to harm

State Bar of Arizona Discipline

Criminal outcomes influence but do not control bar discipline. Defense strategy should consider:

  • Mandatory self-reporting requirements when charges are filed
  • Whether to seek a stay of disciplinary proceedings pending the criminal case
  • How plea allocutions or admissions might trigger automatic discipline
  • Outcomes that avoid findings of “dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation” under ethical rules

A thoughtful strategy may prioritize resolutions that avoid such findings, because they can lead to disbarment or long-term suspension even where criminal penalties are modest.

Defending CPAs and Financial Professionals in Fraud Investigations

CPAs, controllers, CFOs, and other financial professionals face accusations of securities fraud, tax fraud, embezzlement, financial statement manipulation, or aiding and abetting a client’s fraudulent scheme. Financial statement fraud involves misrepresenting a company’s financial status to inflate bonuses or retain jobs. Securities and commodities fraud often centers on creating fraudulent investment schemes to deceive investors. Cyber fraud includes various types of financial crime that occur online, such as phishing and malware attacks, while account takeover fraud occurs when cyber criminals impersonate banks to harvest victims’ credentials. Violations of statutory or regulatory requirements can also lead to criminal charges for financial professionals. Eligibility for free legal services in criminal defense cases may depend on the defendant’s income. These cases often turn on technical accounting and tax law questions.

Independent Record Review

Independent Record Review

Defense often requires deep understanding of GAAP, GAAS, tax regulations, and audit procedures. Retaining independent forensic accountants and industry experts early in the case allows the defense to:

  • Re-analyze data and challenge government assumptions about “loss”
  • Explain how accounting and valuation often involve judgment calls and estimates
  • Show that departures from best practices may support civil liability but not criminal intent
  • Educate juries about the complexity of regulatory frameworks

Reliance on Client-Provided Information

CPAs may have been misled by incomplete or falsified documents from clients. The defense can highlight:

  • Engagement letters limiting the scope of work
  • Written management representation letters from clients
  • Audit workpapers showing what information was provided and when
  • Instances where the CPA insisted on corrections or refused to sign off when information seemed unreliable

Parallel Regulatory Exposure

CPAs may simultaneously face investigations by:

  • Arizona State Board of Accountancy
  • PCAOB (for public company auditors)
  • SEC Enforcement Division
  • IRS Criminal Investigation or Office of Professional Responsibility

Statements in regulatory exams, civil audits, or OPR matters can later be used in criminal prosecution. Coordination across all proceedings is critical.

Collateral Consequences

The stakes for CPAs extend beyond criminal penalties:

  • Loss of CPA license
  • Bars from practicing before the IRS or SEC
  • Employment termination and difficulty finding new positions
  • Civil suits from clients or investors

Defense strategy should seek resolutions that preserve licensure or make reinstatement realistic.

Protecting Your License and Professional Future

For doctors, lawyers, and CPAs, the practical impact of a fraud case is often measured as much in licensing and reputation damage as in jail time, fines, or probation. Navigating the criminal justice system presents unique challenges for professionals, making it crucial to mount strong defense efforts to protect your license and professional future. A misdemeanor conviction or even a deferred prosecution agreement can still trigger board discipline, credentialing problems, and difficulty maintaining a practice.

Running Defense on Two Tracks

An effective defense plan operates simultaneously on:

TrackProceedings
Criminal/Federal CourtGrand jury investigation, indictment, trial, sentencing
Administrative/DisciplinaryMedical board, State Bar, Board of Accountancy, hospital committees, payer audits

Statements, admissions, or settlements in one forum can be used against you in the other. Experienced counsel coordinates strategy across both tracks.

Early Intervention Benefits

Early intervention can sometimes prevent charges altogether by:

  • Responding to subpoenas appropriately to avoid obstruction allegations
  • Correcting documentation or clarifying misunderstandings with insurers or regulators
  • Presenting exculpatory evidence before the prosecutor decides to file charges
  • Negotiating civil or administrative resolutions instead of criminal filings

Dangers of Speaking Without Counsel

Professionals often feel compelled to cooperate with investigators, auditors, or board staff. This instinct can be dangerous:

  • Admissions to “errors” or “shortcuts” can be reframed as intent to defraud
  • Informal interviews may not include Miranda warnings even when the professional is a target
  • Statements to licensing boards are rarely privileged and can be subpoenaed by prosecutors

Cooperation without counsel may waive defenses or protections you didn’t know you had.

Managing Media and Reputation

Beyond the legal process, a fraud investigation can devastate your professional reputation:

  • Media coverage can harm referrals, patient panels, and client relationships
  • Employer or partner questions require careful, legally appropriate responses
  • Credentialing applications will ask about investigations and charges
  • Online reputation damage may persist even after acquittal

Defense counsel can advise on what can be said publicly and how to minimize long-term damage.

When Conviction Cannot Be Avoided

Even when the evidence is strong, experienced counsel can negotiate outcomes more compatible with license retention:

  • Pleas to misdemeanor offenses rather than felony charges
  • Deferred prosecution or diversion programs
  • Structured admissions that don’t automatically trigger disbarment or license revocation
  • Cooperation agreements that account for licensing consequences

Frequently Asked Questions About Defending Professionals in Fraud Cases

Should I cooperate with auditors, insurance investigators, or my licensing board without an attorney?

While some level of cooperation may be required—especially in regulatory proceedings where failure to respond can itself result in discipline—cooperation should always be structured through counsel. Your attorney can ensure that responses are accurate, carefully framed, and do not unintentionally admit to criminal conduct. Even truthful statements can be taken out of context or mischaracterized. Having counsel present protects you from saying something that sounds like an admission of intent when you’re simply trying to explain a complex situation.

Can my malpractice or professional liability insurance help with my defense costs?

Some professional liability policies may cover defense costs for civil claims or disciplinary proceedings, but most policies contain exclusions for intentional fraud, dishonest acts, or criminal conduct. Even if coverage applies to the civil track of your case, the criminal defense will likely require separate representation. The attorneys at JacksonWhite can review your policies and coordinate with any appointed counsel to ensure your defense is comprehensive and consistent across all proceedings.

Will a fraud investigation affect my ability to practice in other states or apply for new positions?

Board actions, NPDB reports, and bar or accountancy discipline frequently must be reported to other jurisdictions, hospitals, and employers. A pending investigation or adverse outcome in Arizona can trigger credentialing reviews, license application denials, or employment termination in other states. This makes early strategic advice critical—the way your case is resolved in Arizona can have ripple effects throughout your career. Defense counsel should consider these multistate implications when negotiating outcomes.

Is it possible to resolve a professional fraud case without a felony conviction?

Depending on the facts and the strength of the government’s evidence, defense strategies may aim for dismissal, acquittal, reduced charges, misdemeanor pleas, diversion programs, or civil settlements that minimize impact on licensure. In some cases, prosecutors are willing to negotiate outcomes that avoid mandatory license revocation or permit future reinstatement. An experienced criminal defense lawyer will evaluate all options and pursue the resolution that best protects your liberty, your license, and your long-term career.

How the JacksonWhite Criminal Defense Team Can Help

JacksonWhite Attorneys at Law is an Arizona-based firm with extensive training and experience handling white collar crimes and other criminal offense and fraud cases throughout the state. Early legal intervention can mean the difference between preserving your career and watching it unravel. Our team of experienced attorneys is dedicated to achieving the best possible outcome for clients facing fraud charges, using a strategic approach and leveraging our experience to maximize positive case resolutions.

If you are under investigation, have received a target letter, audit notice, or board complaint, or have already been charged with fraud or other white collar crimes, contact the JacksonWhite criminal defense team today at (480) 745-1639 schedule a confidential consultation about your specific situation.

Written By

Adam M. Ashby

Criminal Defense Attorney

Adam Ashby is a key member of the criminal defense team at JacksonWhite. Adam joined the Firm in 2017 as an associate and was promoted to partner in 2023. Adam has participated in the development of the criminal defense department and has seen it grow from two to eight attorneys. In 2020, he developed JacksonWhite’s Spanish division, Abogados A Tu Alcance, and is the managing attorney of that department to this day. He has represented hundreds of individuals in many areas of criminal defense, including all different misdemeanors and felonies.

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