The Denver Post

Judge rejects plea deal for disbarred attorney

- By Sam Tabachnik stabachnik@denverpost.com

A judge on Friday rejected a plea agreement between Denver prosecutor­s and a disbarred attorney who has admitted to defrauding an investor of $125,000, calling the possibilit­y of the lawyer avoiding jail time and having a felony wiped clean “a miscarriag­e of justice.”

“Justice in this society cannot be seen as one buying oneself out of a felony conviction,” Denver District Judge Eric M. Johnson told the court during what was supposed to have been Steve Bachar’s sentencing hearing.

The unusual plea rejection came after testimony from Jamie Lindsay, who says Bachar, 57, swindled him out of hundreds of thousands of dollars.

With his money gone, Lindsay told the judge he had to move away from his family and friends. Instead of relaxing during retirement by his lake house, the 74-year- old had to sell the property and get a job to make ends meet.

“The reality is I was forced to make these decisions by a con man,” Lindsay said.

Bachar originally was scheduled to be sentenced March 3 but skipped that court appearance, leading to an arrest warrant. He returned to court Friday to be sentenced.

The lawyer in November pleaded guilty to one count of felony theft and a second count of misdemeano­r theft as part of a plea agreement with prosecutor­s. Bachar admitted in court that he took $125,000 from a man who thought he was investing in a business called Empowermen­t Capital. The deal stipulated that Bachar pay nearly $175,000 restitutio­n and that he receive a deferred judgment on the felony charge, which means the count would be scrubbed from his record if he met court-ordered conditions for two years.

But Johnson said he couldn’t accept the deal. Instead, Bachar was allowed Friday to withdraw his guilty plea, and his case is now set for trial in September.

“Day in, day out people go to prison for stealing a lot less than $174,000,” the judge said.

Carolyn Tyler, a spokeswoma­n for the Denver district attorney, said, “We respect the judge’s decision.”

Denver prosecutor­s criminally charged Bachar a year after he was sued twice and accused of mishandlin­g nearly $2 million in funds earmarked for personal protective equipment during the pandemic.

Bachar, who served in the White House under President Bill Clinton and in the Treasury Department before he moved to Denver, was ordered to pay $4.5 million in those civil cases. He was disbarred in June, with authoritie­s saying he had not paid the civil damages.

The disbarred attorney already had paid more than $174,000 in restitutio­n as part of his plea deal. That money will be returned to him as he awaits trial.

 ?? ?? Steve Bachar
Steve Bachar

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