Federal White Collar Crimes Lawyer Washington. Federal white collar investigations in Washington often start quietly. By the time the FBI, IRS, SEC, HHS-OIG, or another federal agency contacts you, prosecutors may already have financial records, emails, subpoenas, witness statements, and a theory of the case.
This is not the time to “wait and see.” An experienced Washington federal crimes defense lawyer can step in before your own words, records, or delay make the situation harder to control.
If the government is asking questions about your records, billing, taxes, transactions, contracts, or business practices, do not treat it like routine paperwork. Combs Waterkotte’s Washington federal white collar crimes lawyers defend individuals, professionals, business owners, executives, contractors, health care providers, and organizations in high-stakes federal investigations.
Need a federal white collar crimes lawyer in Washington? Call Combs Waterkotte at (314) 900-HELP or contact us online now for a free, confidential consultation.
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Facing Federal Criminal Charges? Why They’re Different and How to Win
Combs Waterkotte, a leading federal criminal defense law firm, has handled over 10,000 cases successfully. This ebook guides you through the federal criminal defense process, how federal charges are different, and how to win.
Here’s what you’ll find below:
- How white collar cases become federal criminal matters
- Common federal financial crime charges and statutes
- How to respond if federal agents, subpoenas, or target letters are involved
- How intent, records, and the government’s theory can be challenged
- Prison, fines, restitution, forfeiture, and career consequences
- When to get a federal criminal defense lawyer involved
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What Counts as a Federal White Collar Crime?
A federal white collar crime is not usually about force or violence. It is typically about money, records, transactions, public programs, professional duties, or business decisions the government claims were used unlawfully.
A white collar case becomes federal when the alleged conduct touches federal law, federal funds, interstate commerce, a federal program, or a federal investigative agency. That can happen in several ways:
- A federal offense charged under a federal criminal statute, including wire fraud, mail fraud, bank fraud, money laundering, tax fraud, or conspiracy
- Communications or transactions that crossed state lines, such as emails, calls, wire transfers, electronic payments, or online activity
- A bank, lender, or federally insured financial institution
- Federal money, including government contracts, grants, benefits, disaster relief funds, or federally backed loans
- Federal tax issues investigated by IRS Criminal Investigation
- Investment activity, securities transactions, investor communications, or market conduct reviewed by the SEC Division of Enforcement
- Billing, reimbursement, referral, or medical necessity issues involving Medicare, Medicaid, or other federal health care programs and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General
- A broader federal investigation led by the FBI, U.S. Attorney’s Office, or another federal agency
Federal white collar cases are built differently than many other criminal cases. Instead of one witness or one arrest, the government may rely on months of financial records, emails, contracts, billing data, internal policies, audit trails, and interviews. A strong defense has to organize that material, challenge the government’s assumptions, and throw doubt on the prosecution’s case.
Federal White Collar Charges We Defend in Washington
Combs Waterkotte defends clients in Washington against a wide range of federal white collar allegations, including:
- Wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1343: Federal wire fraud cases usually turn on the government’s claim that electronic communications were used to advance a fraudulent scheme.
- Mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1341: Mail fraud cases focus on whether the mail or a private delivery service was used as part of an alleged fraud.
- Bank fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1344: These cases may involve loan applications, account activity, lending documents, collateral, business records, or transactions tied to a federally insured financial institution.
- Health care fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1347: Health care fraud cases may involve Medicare, Medicaid, private insurers, billing records, medical necessity disputes, coding issues, kickback allegations, or claims for services the government says were improper.
- Securities and commodities fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1348: Prosecutors may bring these charges when they believe investors, markets, disclosures, or trades were affected by false or misleading information.
- Tax evasion and false tax filings, 26 U.S.C. §§ 7201 and 7206: These cases may involve alleged underreporting, false documents, hidden income, improper deductions, or statements the IRS believes were knowingly false.
- Money laundering, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1956 and 1957: Money laundering charges usually claim that financial transactions involved criminal proceeds, concealed the source of funds, promoted unlawful activity, or exceeded statutory transaction thresholds.
- Embezzlement and theft from federal programs or institutions: These cases may involve allegations that someone misused, diverted, or took money connected to a federal program, public contract, financial institution, or benefit plan.
- Identity theft and aggravated identity theft, 18 U.S.C. § 1028A: Aggravated identity theft is often charged alongside fraud when the government claims another person’s identifying information was used during the alleged offense.
- Computer fraud and unauthorized access, 18 U.S.C. § 1030: Computer fraud cases often turn on whether access to a system, file, account, database, or network was authorized.
- False statements, 18 U.S.C. § 1001: A false statement charge may come from what someone said, signed, certified, submitted, or failed to clarify during a federal inquiry.
- Federal conspiracy, 18 U.S.C. § 371 or § 1349: A conspiracy charge may be based on emails, meetings, transactions, shared records, or other evidence the government says shows an agreement to commit a federal crime.
It is common for federal prosecutors to charge more than one offense in a white collar case. Fraud allegations may be tied to conspiracy, money laundering, false statements, obstruction, asset forfeiture, and restitution demands.
Why a Federal White Collar Case Is Not a Routine Criminal Case
Federal white collar cases are often built long before an arrest. Investigators may use subpoenas, search warrants, forensic accountants, cooperating witnesses, grand jury proceedings, and agency audits before charges are filed.
The government’s advantage is often preparation. In a white collar case, federal prosecutors may have a detailed timeline, document map, cooperating witnesses, and financial analysis before the defense ever sees the full case file.
Federal sentencing can also turn on details that are not obvious at the beginning of a case, including alleged loss amount, number of victims, role in the offense, use of sophisticated means, obstruction allegations, and acceptance of responsibility.
Signs of a Federal White Collar Investigation in Washington
If federal agents, subpoenas, or agency questions are already in the picture, do not wait for formal charges. Contact Combs Waterkotte’s Washington federal white collar crimes lawyers if:
- Federal agents showed up at your home, workplace, business, or called you directly
- The government asked for business records, emails, account information, phone data, or financial documents
- A subpoena went to your employer, company, bank, client, vendor, accountant, or another third party
- Investigators searched your home, office, devices, storage, or business location
- Federal agents started asking questions of people connected to your work, finances, or business dealings
- You received a target letter or grand jury notice
- A routine audit started turning into something larger, more serious, or more investigative
- Investigators want an informal explanation about records, money movement, billing, taxes, contracts, or applications
Do not treat an agent interview like a routine conversation. What feels like a simple explanation can become evidence, especially if your answer does not match records you have not seen.
How Our Washington Defense Lawyers Fight Federal White Collar Cases
The government may see fraud in a stack of records. The defense has to test that assumption. Many federal white collar cases turn on whether the evidence shows criminal intent, or instead a mistake, miscommunication, business dispute, compliance issue, accounting problem, or good-faith judgment call.
Depending on where the case stands, our Washington federal white collar defense team may:
- Handle contact with investigators, agencies, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office
- Respond strategically to subpoenas, warrants, target letters, and investigative demands
- Review the documents the government is using to build its version of events
- Attack the legal and factual assumptions behind the government’s theory
- Identifying constitutional issues, unreliable witnesses, and gaps in the government’s timeline
- Use outside experts to test financial records, loss calculations, billing practices, or technical evidence
- Negotiating before indictment when possible
- Build the case for motions, negotiation, trial, or sentencing from day one
From day one, Combs Waterkotte’s Washington federal white collar defense lawyers prepare as though the case may have to be fought in court. That trial-ready approach gives your defense leverage at every stage.
Penalties and Consequences of Federal White Collar Crimes in Washington
A federal white collar conviction can carry consequences that reach far beyond the courtroom. Depending on the offense, alleged loss, criminal history, and facts of the case, penalties may include:
- Significant prison time, depending on the charge and sentencing factors
- A restitution order requiring repayment of alleged financial losses
- Criminal fines
- Loss of property or funds the government claims are connected to the case
- Strict supervised release conditions after a sentence
- Career damage through licensing impacts, board discipline, or professional restrictions
- Exclusion from government programs
- Serious immigration consequences, including deportation risk in some cases
- Long-term damage to your name, business, career, and earning ability
Call a Federal White Collar Defense Lawyer in Washington
If federal agents are asking questions or charges have already been filed in Washington, now is the time to get a defense lawyer involved.
Combs Waterkotte’s Washington federal white collar crimes lawyers defend clients against serious federal allegations involving fraud, tax issues, health care billing, money laundering, conspiracy, and records-heavy investigations.
To speak with a federal white collar crimes lawyer, call (314) 900-HELP or contact us online for a free, confidential consultation.

