1. How Nonprofit Embezzlement Is Charged
Embezzlement from a nonprofit is not a single offense with a single charging statute. Prosecutors build cases using multiple overlapping charges, and the specific combination depends on the method of diversion, the amount involved, whether federal funds were used, and which agency initiated the investigation.
State Charges, Federal Charges, and the Role of Federal Funding
Most nonprofit embezzlement cases begin at the state level, where prosecutors apply general theft, larceny, or embezzlement statutes. The threshold between misdemeanor and felony treatment follows the same value-based structure as other theft offenses in the relevant state.
Federal jurisdiction attaches in several specific circumstances. When a nonprofit receives federal grants or contracts, diverted funds can become theft of federal program funds under 18 U.S.C. § 666, which applies to organizations receiving at least $10,000 in federal assistance within a one-year period and covers individual thefts or transactions of $5,000 or more. Penalties under § 666 reach up to ten years in federal prison. When the scheme involves electronic transfers, payroll manipulation, or vendor fraud using email or wire communications, wire and mail fraud charges under 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1343 typically follow, each carrying up to 20 years per count. When diverted funds move through financial accounts in patterns designed to obscure their source, money laundering charges under 18 U.S.C. § 1956 add further exposure.
Common Embezzlement Schemes and Fraud Patterns
Nonprofit embezzlement takes several recurring forms. The 2024 ACFE Report to the Nations found that for nonprofits with fewer than 100 employees, fraud schemes break down as follows:
| Fraud Type | Share of Cases |
|---|---|
| Corruption | 44% |
| Billing Fraud | 31% |
| Check / Payment Tampering | 23% |
| Skimming | 10% |
Each scheme type leaves a distinct evidentiary footprint that shapes both how investigators build their cases and how defense counsel challenges the prosecution's theory:
- Payroll fraud: Creating fictitious employees, inflating hours, or issuing unauthorized compensation to the perpetrator or associates.
- Vendor fraud: Establishing shell vendors, approving inflated invoices, or diverting payments to personally controlled accounts.
- Check and payment tampering: Altering payee information, forging authorized signatures, or intercepting payments before deposit.
- Skimming: Intercepting cash donations, ticket proceeds, or other revenue before it is recorded in the organization's books.
- Grant diversion: Redirecting restricted grant funds to unauthorized uses, which may simultaneously violate grant agreements and trigger federal charges under § 666.
If you are under investigation for nonprofit embezzlement, have been contacted by a state attorney general's office, the IRS, or the FBI, or have received a grand jury investigation subpoena related to a charitable organization, consulting a federal criminal defense attorney before responding to any inquiry is essential. Statements made at the investigation stage, even ones that seem explanatory, routinely become the evidentiary foundation of the charges themselves.
2. IRS Consequences and the Tax-Exempt Dimension
An IRS tax-exempt designation brings strict regulatory scrutiny. When embezzlement occurs, it triggers a parallel exposure that runs independently of any criminal prosecution and can affect both the organization's continued exempt status and the individual's personal tax liability.
Form 990 Disclosure, IRS Audits, and Tax-Exempt Status
Organizations that become aware of a significant diversion of assets may need to disclose it on Form 990 under the diversion of assets question and explain corrective steps on Schedule O. The disclosure covers the year the diversion is discovered, not the year it occurred, and should include how and when the issue came to light, what board action followed, and any law enforcement involvement. Omitting or understating the disclosure creates independent IRS exposure on top of the underlying misconduct.
The IRS audited approximately 660 nonprofits that filed Form 990 in 2024 out of an estimated 1.9 million tax-exempt organizations. An embezzlement disclosure can trigger a broader audit of the organization's financial practices. Revocation of § 501(c) status strips the organization of tax-exempt treatment, makes donations non-deductible, and exposes the entity to back taxes. The individual who committed the embezzlement faces a separate personal tax liability: embezzled funds constitute taxable income to the recipient under long-standing IRS and judicial authority, regardless of whether they were reported.
When the IRS Refers Cases for Federal Prosecution
IRS Criminal Investigation handles tax-related financial crimes and coordinates with the FBI and the Department of Justice in significant nonprofit fraud matters. When a case involves tax evasion, false returns, or structured transactions designed to avoid reporting thresholds, IRS-CI involvement can transform a state-level matter into a federal criminal prosecution. Recent IRS-CI press releases document multiple prosecutions in 2024 and 2025 involving nonprofit executives, including a former executive director sentenced for embezzling over $500,000 from a nonprofit serving Oakland youth, and a former Detroit riverfront conservancy CFO sentenced for embezzling over $40 million.
Accounting fraud investigation counsel and criminal defense attorneys need to coordinate early because the IRS administrative track and the criminal prosecution track can proceed simultaneously. Actions taken to respond to an IRS inquiry, including document production and written explanations, can have direct consequences in any parallel criminal proceeding. Government and internal investigations counsel experienced in both tracks is essential to managing this dual exposure.
3. Defense Strategies for Individuals Facing Embezzlement Charges
Defending a nonprofit embezzlement charge requires engaging the specific evidence the prosecution has assembled, the legal theories they are pursuing, and the defendant's actual role and intent within the organization. No single defense applies across all cases.
Intent, Authorization, and the Evidentiary Record
Embezzlement requires proof that the defendant took property entrusted to them with the specific intent to defraud the organization. Intent is frequently the most contested element.
Several defense arguments address it directly:
- Authorization defense: A defendant who believed their compensation, expense reimbursements, or fund transfers were authorized by the board or by their employment agreement may lack the criminal intent required for conviction. Documented board approvals, employment contracts, and compensation committee minutes are critical evidence.
- Disputed characterization of payments: Transactions that appear to be embezzlement may reflect deferred compensation arrangements, authorized loans, or expense reimbursements that were improperly documented rather than fraudulently taken. Establishing the distinction between poor record-keeping and intentional fraud is a core defense task.
- Scope of role and authority: In organizations with weak internal controls, multiple people may have had access to accounts or signing authority. Establishing that another person was responsible for specific transactions, or that the defendant lacked the authority or access alleged, challenges the prosecution's identification theory.
- Forensic accounting challenges: Prosecutors rely heavily on financial records and expert testimony to establish loss amounts. Defense forensic accounting can challenge that methodology, which directly affects both the viability of the charge and the sentencing guidelines calculation.
Breach of fiduciary duty claims in parallel civil proceedings often arise from the same facts as the criminal case. Admissions made in the civil context can be used in the criminal proceeding, making coordinated defense across both tracks essential from the outset.
Sentencing, Restitution, and Cooperation Considerations
Federal embezzlement and fraud sentences are driven primarily by the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, calculated from the loss amount with several potential enhancements. The abuse-of-trust enhancement may apply where the defendant used a fiduciary or managerial role to facilitate the offense, which is a common fact pattern in nonprofit cases. Additional enhancements apply for the number of victims and for obstruction of justice if the defendant took steps to conceal the scheme after it began to unravel.
Criminal restitution is mandatory in federal fraud cases under the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act, calculated from the actual loss to the organization. Restitution orders are enforceable as civil judgments, survive bankruptcy in most circumstances, and can follow a defendant for decades. Asset forfeiture of proceeds traceable to the scheme is standard in federal prosecutions and requires independent challenge separate from the sentencing proceeding. Cooperation agreements can reduce sentencing exposure but carry strategic risks and should only be evaluated with counsel who has reviewed the full evidentiary record and the fraud sentencing guidelines calculation.
4. What Nonprofits and Boards Should Do after Discovering Embezzlement
Nonprofit embezzlement creates legal exposure not only for the individual who committed the fraud but also for the organization and, in some circumstances, for board members who failed to provide adequate oversight. The organizational response in the first days after discovery shapes every subsequent proceeding.
Board Liability, Internal Investigations, and Reporting Obligations
Board members of nonprofit organizations owe fiduciary duties of care and loyalty. When embezzlement occurs, regulators and courts examine whether the board exercised reasonable oversight. Board oversight failures can expose individual board members to civil liability and regulatory sanctions. Personal liability is most likely where the board ignored documented red flags or failed to implement basic financial controls.
Several immediate steps matter when an organization discovers or suspects embezzlement. Preserving financial records, bank statements, payroll records, vendor files, and board minutes before any internal investigation begins is essential. The organization should engage internal investigation services counsel to conduct an independent review under attorney-client privilege. Reporting obligations depend on the funding source and grant terms: federal grant-related losses may require notice to the grant-making agency, an inspector general, or federal law enforcement, depending on the specific facts. The IRS Form 990 disclosure obligation runs on a separate track from law enforcement reporting.
Civil Recovery, Insurance Claims, and Organizational Continuity
Organizations that have suffered embezzlement have several civil recovery options. A civil lawsuit for conversion, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, or misappropriation of charitable assets can run alongside or after the criminal prosecution. Many nonprofits carry employee dishonesty coverage or fidelity bond insurance that may cover losses, though the claim process requires careful documentation and timely notice to the insurer.
Organizations that invest in fraud awareness training cut the average time to uncover fraud from 24 months to nine months and report nearly 50% lower financial losses, according to the 2024 ACFE Report. Implementing stronger internal controls, separating financial duties, requiring dual authorization for disbursements, and establishing anonymous reporting channels are both remedial steps after an embezzlement is discovered and long-term defenses against future incidents.
If your organization has discovered a potential embezzlement, or if you are an individual under investigation in connection with nonprofit finances, the decisions made in the first days of the inquiry shape every subsequent proceeding. Consulting counsel who handles both the criminal and regulatory dimensions simultaneously is the most effective way to protect your options.
5. Common Questions about Nonprofit Embezzlement Charges
When embezzlement touches a nonprofit, the questions that follow span criminal exposure, tax consequences, and organizational governance all at once. The answers below address what individuals and organizations most frequently ask when navigating these situations.
What Is Nonprofit Embezzlement, and How Does It Differ from Ordinary Theft?
The key distinction is position of trust. Nonprofit embezzlement involves a person who had lawful access to organizational funds and diverted them for personal use, rather than taking property they had no right to access. That trustee relationship is what separates embezzlement from ordinary theft, and it is also what triggers the additional IRS and regulatory consequences that ordinary theft does not carry.
Can Nonprofit Embezzlement Become a Federal Crime?
Yes, through several independent routes. Federal jurisdiction attaches under 18 U.S.C. § 666 when the organization receives at least $10,000 in federal assistance and the individual theft exceeds $5,000. Wire and mail fraud charges apply whenever email, electronic transfers, or postal communications furthered the scheme, regardless of grant funding. When the perpetrator failed to report embezzled income, IRS-CI can add tax fraud charges as a third federal track.
What Are the Penalties for Nonprofit Embezzlement?
The range is wide and charge-dependent. State felony embezzlement typically carries one to ten years. Federal charges under § 666 carry up to ten years; wire and mail fraud carry up to 20 years per count. The abuse-of-trust enhancement under the federal sentencing guidelines may increase the advisory range beyond what the raw loss amount alone would produce. Mandatory restitution and forfeiture of proceeds are standard components of any federal sentence.
Does the Organization Lose Its Tax-Exempt Status If Embezzlement Occurs?
Not automatically, but the risk is real. The IRS requires Form 990 disclosure and may audit broadly. How the board responds matters: organizations that promptly disclose, implement corrective controls, and cooperate with investigators are in a substantially better position than those that manage the situation quietly. Revocation typically follows a pattern of serious violations rather than a single incident handled transparently.
Can Board Members Be Personally Liable for Embezzlement They Did Not Commit?
Civil liability is possible when board members ignored red flags, failed to implement basic financial controls, or abdicated oversight responsibilities. The practical question regulators and plaintiffs ask is what the board knew, when they knew it, and what they did about it. Criminal liability for non-participating board members is rare but not impossible in cases involving willful blindness to an ongoing scheme.
What Should an Organization Do in the First 48 Hours after Discovering Embezzlement?
Preserve all financial records immediately and do not alter or destroy anything. Engage independent legal counsel before contacting law enforcement or making any public statements, so the internal investigation proceeds under attorney-client privilege. Determine the applicable reporting obligations based on the funding source and grant terms. Do not name the suspected individual in any IRS filing; include the investigation number instead. Contact the organization's fidelity bond insurer promptly, as late notice can affect coverage.
23 Jun, 2026

