
White Collar Crimes
White collar crime cases are paper cases — and paper cases require attorneys who know how to read them. Financial records, email archives, accounting ledgers, corporate filings, and electronic transaction histories form the core of most prosecutions, and the government invests significant resources in building them before charges are filed. By the time an arrest is made, investigators have often been working the case for months. At the Law Office of Nic Cocis, we defend individuals and professionals facing fraud, embezzlement, forgery, bribery, and related charges in Murrieta and throughout Southwest Riverside County, with the same preparation the prosecution brings — and the trial experience to back it.
How California White Collar Crime Law Works
Fraud, Embezzlement, and the Crimes That Carry the Most Exposure
California’s white collar crime statutes cover a range of conduct, but most cases share a common element: the prosecution must prove intent. Fraud requires an intentional misrepresentation made to obtain money or property. Embezzlement requires a fraudulent appropriation of entrusted funds. That intent element is often where these cases are won or lost.
Fraud under Penal Code § 532 encompasses a wide variety of schemes — insurance fraud, real estate fraud, wire fraud, mortgage fraud, identity theft, and check fraud, among others. Many fraud cases are also charged federally, particularly when the conduct involved interstate wire transfers, bank accounts insured by the FDIC, or federal programs. Federal fraud charges under 18 U.S.C. § 1341 (mail fraud) and § 1343 (wire fraud) carry up to 20 years per count, and federal prosecution means no possibility of probation.
Embezzlement under Penal Code § 503 involves the fraudulent taking of property that was lawfully entrusted to the defendant. The classic scenario involves an employee who has authority over funds and diverts them. But embezzlement charges also arise in business partnerships, in fiduciary relationships, and in situations where the line between authorized use and unauthorized taking is genuinely disputed. The amount taken determines whether the offense is petty or grand theft — but either way, a conviction in a professional context is devastating.
Forgery under Penal Code § 470 covers the signing of another’s name, the alteration of a legal document, and the creation of false financial instruments with intent to defraud. It’s a wobbler, chargeable as a misdemeanor or felony, with the felony version carrying up to three years. When forgery involves government documents, the penalties escalate under separate provisions.
Bribery under Penal Code § 67 (bribery of an executive officer) and § 92 (bribery of a judicial officer) is a straight felony with prison exposure. Bribery of a public official carries two to four years. The offer itself — even if refused — constitutes the offense.
Counterfeiting under Penal Code § 480 and related federal statutes covers the manufacture or possession of counterfeit currency and documents. Federal counterfeiting charges, particularly those involving U.S. currency, are prosecuted by the Secret Service and carry federal sentencing guidelines with significant prison ranges.
The Federal Dimension: When State Charges Become Federal
White collar cases frequently cross into federal jurisdiction. If the alleged conduct involved banks, wire transfers, federally insured financial institutions, federal programs such as Medicare or Medicaid, interstate commerce, or digital communications crossing state lines, federal prosecution is possible — and federal sentencing guidelines are significantly more severe than California’s sentencing framework. Federal courts don’t offer the same probation options, and federal mandatory minimums apply in certain fraud categories. We evaluate federal exposure early in every white collar case.
How We Can Help with White Collar Charges
White collar defense requires a different kind of preparation than street crime defense. We work through the documentary record, identify weaknesses in the prosecution’s theory of intent, retain forensic accountants and expert witnesses where needed, and build a defense that addresses the paper trail directly.
Our white collar crime defense services include:
Intent Is the Battleground
Most white collar prosecutions rise or fall on intent. The prosecution must prove you knew what you were doing was fraudulent — not that you made a bad business decision, not that records were disorganized, not that a transaction looked unusual in hindsight. We build the defense around the legitimate explanations for the conduct at issue, the business context in which decisions were made, and the absence of the specific intent the prosecution must prove.
What to Expect When You Work with Us
Facing White Collar Charges in Murrieta or the Surrounding Area?
Early representation changes the outcome in white collar cases more than in almost any other area of criminal law. Contact the Law Office of Nic Cocis for a consultation. We serve clients in Murrieta, Temecula, Menifee, Lake Elsinore, Wildomar, Winchester, Canyon Lake, French Valley, and throughout Southwest Riverside County.
Why Choose the Law Office of Nic Cocis?
Former DA’s Office Intern
Understands how financial crime cases are built from the prosecution’s perspective
State and Federal Experience
Handles both California white collar charges and cases with federal dimensions
Professional Client Background
Has represented police officers, nurses, doctors, and other licensed professionals whose careers depend on the outcome
Multilingual Services
English, Romanian, and Spanish available





