Albany Times Union

Gets prison time

Lagan and partner plundered millions from family trusts

- By Robert Gavin

Lawyer in $9 million scheme against elderly sentenced to four to 12 years in jail./

Thomas Lagan, one of two lawyers who took part in a nearly $9 million scheme that victimized the elderly, was sentenced Tuesday to four to 12 years in prison, the state attorney general’s office announced.

Prosecutor­s said Lagan and fellow lawyer and co-defendant Richard Sherwood plundered millions from family trusts they were responsibl­e for overseeing.

Lagan, 60, of Cooperstow­n, who prosecutor­s said brazenly continued to use proceeds of the crime even after his arrest and was buying property in Otsego County, pleaded guilty in April to first-degree grand larceny Tuesday before state Supreme Court Justice Thomas Breslin in Albany. He pleaded guilty to federal charges in August.

Lagan is expected to serve his sentence in federal prison. Sherwood awaits sentencing.

“Financial advisors exist to help protect our money, not steal it,” Attorney General Letitia James said Tuesday.

“These individual­s were entrusted with protecting financial assets, but instead, they took advantage of their clients and stole funds for personal use.”

So far, law enforcemen­t has recovered $5.5 million in criminal proceeds from the $9.8 million larceny, prosecutor­s said.

Lagan’s admissions followed the guilty plea last year of Sherwood, who was prepared to testify against Lagan under an agreement with prosecutor­s, court papers show. Sherwood served as a Guilderlan­d town justice until his arrest.

Sherwood admitted he and Lagan wrote eight checks, each for $14,000, to one another, their wives and their children. They used thousands of dollars from the estates of clients to pay for the college tuition of Lagan’s daughter.

The scheme evolved after Sher

wood and Lagan, who practiced in the area of trusts and estates, began providing legal services and financial advice to local philanthro­pists Warren and Pauline Bruggeman, as well as Pauline’s sister, Anne Urban, in 2006.

Warren Bruggeman, a Queens native who served as a naval officer in World War II, earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute in Troy and worked at General Electric in Schenectad­y at the Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory. He became a vice president at GE, where he overhauled a financiall­y ailing nuclear program into a commercial success.

In 1947, he married Pauline Bruggeman, a Watervliet native and graduate of Troy Business College and Sage Junior College, who later worked as a secretary at Behr-manning Corporatio­n. Following his retirement, Bruggeman became involved in various philanthro­pic causes. He also served

on the RPI board of trustees.

Sherwood had been advising the Bruggemans when they signed wills directing that all their assets were to go to charities, churches and civic associatio­ns, in addition to bequests to Anne Urban and Pauline’s other sister, Julia Rentz, according to federal prosecutor­s.

Warren Bruggeman died in April 2009. Pauline Bruggeman died in August 2011. At the time of her death, her personal and trust assets were valued at about $20 million.

Following the woman’s death, Sherwood and Lagan schemed to steal and launder millions of dollars from her estate and the estate of Anne Urban, who died in 2013. Sherwood and Lagan also diverted and transferre­d several million dollars that belonged to Rentz, who suffered from dementia and died in 2013, prosecutor­s said.

 ?? Brendan Lyons / times union ?? thomas Lagan is brought into Albany City Court after his arrest in february 2018. He was sentenced to four to 12 years in prison tuesday.
Brendan Lyons / times union thomas Lagan is brought into Albany City Court after his arrest in february 2018. He was sentenced to four to 12 years in prison tuesday.

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