San Antonio Express-News

Software tycoon in $2B tax case is claiming that he has dementia

- By Neil Weinberg and David Voreacos

Texas software mogul Robert Brockman has an unusual defense against charges that he used an arsenal of code names, untraceabl­e phones and an “Evidence Eliminator” to sock away $2 billion in the largest tax-fraud case in U.S. history.

Lawyers for Brockman, 79, claim that even though he ran a multibilli­on-dollar software company until last month, he suffers from dementia so advanced that he’s unable to stand trial.

Prosecutor­s warn Brockman might be engineerin­g an infirmity defense to avoid justice — a position that recalls the hard line the U.S. took with Vincent “the Chin” Gigante — the mafia boss who spent decades feigning insanity to avoid prosecutio­n.

Brockman faces a 39-count indictment that accuses him of tax evasion, money laundering and other crimes involving a vast fortune he earned investing in Vista Equity Partners and secretly stashed in offshore tax havens.

Weeks after his Oct. 1 indictment, he stepped down from his longtime position as chief executive officer of Reynolds and Reynolds, a giant in the market for software used to manage auto dealership­s.

His lawyers now assert that Brockman’s intellectu­al capacity has steadily eroded in the past two years and he scored an 87 on an IQ test — far below the expected level of a man who holds several patents and historical­ly paid great attention to the details of his business.

They say he’s mentally unfit to aid in his defense and asked a federal judge in San Francisco to hold a competency hearing.

“Four highly qualified doctors in Houston, Texas, have examined Mr. Brockman on multiple occasions over a twenty-two month timespan and concluded that his dementia makes him incapable of assisting in his defense,” they said in court papers this month.

In addition to dementia, Brockman’s legal team says, he suffers from Parkinson’s disease, depression and hallucinat­ions.

During one exam, Brockman described “a bug on a testing room floor that was not present to either the examiner” or to the defendant’s wife, one doctor wrote.

Prosecutor­s suspect Brockman may have manufactur­ed his dementia diagnosis. They say a careful look at his actions suggests he may have a “motive to malinger,” and that “his claims are deserving of healthy skepticism.”

The physicians Brockman’s legal team obtained opinions from all are affiliated with the Baylor College of Medicine, to which Brockman has donated tens of millions of dollars, prosecutor­s note.

“The government has serious concerns about the claimed incapacity,” Michael Pitman, a prosecutor on the case, told the judge at a hearing this month. “When did the defendant first start to complain about symptoms that he suggests incapacita­te him? That timeline is very strongly indicative of a defense being manufactur­ed in response to an investigat­ion.”

Brockman sought an appointmen­t with one of his doctors the day after authoritie­s raided the Bermudian home of Evatt Tamine, who managed his offshore assets.

Tamine previously had written Brockman that he was building a relationsh­ip with another Baylor doctor who works “as a strong barrier against an attack from the IRS,” prosecutor­s said.

After Tamine came under increasing scrutiny during trips to the U.S., he proposed storing a phone and other electronic equipment at the doctor’s Houston office rather than risk traveling with them, they added.

“While presenting to his defense attorneys and doctors as a man of rapidly diminishin­g mental capacity, signs of a more robust mental acuity trail in his wake,” prosecutor­s wrote of Brockman.

Ultimately, Tamine received immunity to help U.S. prosecutor­s unravel the financial matters,court records show.

He has testified three times before the grand jury in San Francisco and has provided emails and other documents to prosecutor­s, a person familiar with the matter said.

In contrast to the government’s portrayal, Brockman’s lawyers paint a picture of a man in rapid mental decline, who in October suffered a delusional incident in which he imagined that his son had broken into his computer in the middle of the night.

The judge’s decision on whether Brockman is competent will come down to a “battle of the experts,” said Frank Agostino, a New Jersey tax attorney not involved in the case.

The judge must determine the facts and rule whether Brockman can assist in his defense, Agostino said.

“If he can’t assist in his own defense because his memory is gone, or it’s slipping away, or he’s having delusions, he can’t get a fair trial,” Agostino said. “If the reports are at all credible, his condition is deteriorat­ing rapidly.”

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