Ex-Girardi firm CFO sentenced to prison for stealing funds from plane crash victim clients

The ex-CFO of Girardi Keese was sentenced to over five years in prison for redirecting funds owed to victims’ families. These funds were related to a fatal 2018 plane crash involving a Boeing aircraft.
The misconduct has intensified criticism of Girardi Keese’s practices and contributed to broader calls for reform in legal financial oversight.
Some see the sentencing as a start toward justice, while others argue that only deeper structural change can prevent future exploitation.

Full Story

A federal judge has sentenced the former CFO of the Girardi Keese law firm to 65 months in prison. The conviction involves the misappropriation of millions meant for families of victims of a 2018 plane crash in Indonesia.

Prosecutors stated that the CFO redirected client settlement funds for unauthorized purposes. These funds were owed to the victims of Lion Air Flight 610, which crashed into the Java Sea.

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The Context

The victims’ families were awarded compensation through litigation handled by Girardi Keese. Instead, the money was reportedly siphoned off before it reached them.

Girardi Keese, once a prominent California law firm, has faced multiple legal and ethical scandals. The financial misconduct played a role in its collapse.

The 2018 crash involved a Boeing 737 MAX, a model later grounded worldwide due to safety concerns. The tragedy killed all 189 people on board.

Some view the sentencing as a rare moment of accountability within high-profile legal corruption cases. They argue it sends a message that fiduciary violations won’t go unpunished.

Others believe the penalty is insufficient given the scale of harm to already grieving families. They point to systemic flaws in legal oversight that allowed the misconduct to continue unchecked.

The court’s decision adds to growing public scrutiny of legal firms’ financial practices and their duty to clients. The case illustrates the potential for abuse when oversight is weak.

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Expresses outrage, stresses betrayal of trust toward victims’ families.

Highlights necessity of firm punishments to deter white‑collar crime.

Details sentence, legal reasoning, and restitution process.

Legal blogs probe accounting vulnerabilities in plaintiff firms.