Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lawyer who stole millions sentenced to up to 40 years

- By David Ferrara Las Vegas Review-journal

Disbarred Las Vegas estate lawyer Robert Graham stole millions of dollars from the dying and disabled.

His narcissism ruined the lives of survivors and left clients penniless, a prosecutor said at Graham’s sentencing Friday on five felony counts. He lied, exploited trust and abandoned dozens of vulnerable families in order to satiate his own greed.

District Judge Kerry Earley ordered the 53-year-old, who admitted that he poured piles of stolen cash into homes, cars and Mormon church tithings, to serve 16 to 40 years behind bars, the maximum sentence for charges that included theft and exploitati­on of vulnerable people. He spent chunks of the money, he said, on television advertisin­g in an attempt to resuscitat­e his flounderin­g practice.

He still owes $16,030,396.69 to many like Barbara Macknin, whose husband Michael hired Graham before dying “a gut-wrenching death” from

GRAHAM

mesothelio­ma, thinking the lawyer could help. Instead, Graham wiped out the man’s $1 million estate.

Macknin called Graham “an evil, greedy, heartless predator with no conscience.”

Others said Graham’s fraud destroyed their faith in the legal system.

Robin Adler’s sister, Lynne Lobel, turned to Graham as she battled cancer.

“He shamelessl­y lied to our faces, while he kept up appearanes as a smart, successful attorney,” said Adler, whose sister passed away at 49 in December 2006. “My request is for this monster to get the maximum punishment.”

After 11 victims addressed the court, the judge read exceprts of letters from still more, saying Graham’s “depraved actions” amounted to “utter disregard to your sworn and solemn oath.”

Court records show Graham secretly funneled an average of $187,000 a month in client funds for several years to a special bank account to run his law practice and pay personal bills.

He used client funds to pay $244,000 in taxes and $700,000 a year in advertisin­g for his law firm. He also used the money to make thousands of dollars more in charitable donations to numerous organizati­ons, including the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and Boys Town of Nevada, according to court documents.

Chief Deputy District Attorney

J.P. Raman told the judge that Graham caused “irreparabl­e harm,” “put a lasting dent on the legal profession” and called him “selfish and callous” and “a liar, a cheat, a fraud.”

“He’s a danger to the community,” the prosecutor said. “He has caused more damage to people than he knows or is willing to recognize… He put his needs over the needs of everybody else.”

As Graham told Earley he was trying to protect attorneys in his sinking firm, the judge interrupte­d: “How can you sleep at night? What about your clients? Oh my goodness, your clients.”

Wearing a lime green shirt, black pants and a beard, Graham blamed his crimes on an economic crash, expounded on his own struggles, told the judge he has no money left and asked forgivenes­s from those he robbed. He stopped short of apologizin­g directly to them.

“It was total devastatio­n, and

I just didn’t make the right decisions,” he said. “I’m not a gambler, but I had a gambler’s mentality. I thought if I put more in I’d get more out.”

As a marshal escorted Graham from the courtroom in handcuffs, observers in the gallery aimed their their cellphone cameras at him.

While the stolen money has disappeare­d, it’s unclear whether Graham could repay the victims, including nearly $942,000 from a trust fund for the children of Kenneth and Sheila Miller, who died in a car crash outside Las Vegas seven years ago.

Their daughter, 16-year-old Micaela Miller, told the judge, “I forgive Robert Graham, but I do not want to see this happen to anyone else again.”

Contact David Ferrara at dferrara@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-1039. Follow @randompoke­r on Twitter.

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