The Mercury News

Former cop sentenced to three years for exploiting employees of his private security firm

- By Jason Green jason.green@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

“No one is above accountabi­lity for illegally trying to make a profit on the backs (and injured bodies) of their workers” — Jeff Rosen, Santa Clara County district attorney

An ex-San Jose police officer who ran a private security company has been sentenced to three years in Santa Clara County jail for his part in a scheme that exploited employees and hid millions of dollars from state employment and other taxes.

In January, Robert Foster, 48, of Morgan Hill, pleaded no contest to felony charges including 173 acts of conspiring to commit $1.13 million in insurance fraud and $18 million in money laundering to cover it up, according to the Santa Clara County District Attorney's Office.

“No one is above accountabi­lity for illegally trying to make a profit on the backs (and injured bodies) of their workers,” District Attorney Jeff Rosen said in a statement Tuesday.

In addition to the jail sentence, Foster will serve two years of mandatory supervisio­n.

Foster, along with his wife, Mikaila Foster, 46, owned Atlas Private Security without the knowledge of the San Jose Police Department. He retired from the department after the criminal charges were filed in July 2020.

According to the District Attorney's Office, the Fosters illegally reduced their workers' compensati­on insurance premiums and taxes by reporting false and inaccurate payroll, underrepor­ting head count, paying workers off the books and underrepor­ting worker injuries. The couple also did not pay employees overtime and dissuaded them from accurately reporting on-the-job injuries and wage-theft violations.

A six-month investigat­ion spearheade­d by the District Attorney's Office also found that the Fosters hid millions of dollars of payroll through a complex subcontrac­tor masking scheme. Prosecutor­s said APS employees were paid by a different security company, Defense Protection Group, which had no knowledge of their hours, wages or schedules. Instead, DPG moved money from APS so that the Fosters could avoid paying their fair share of taxes, workers' compensati­on insurance and overtime wages.

Prior to his sentencing, Robert Foster paid $1.13 million in restitutio­n to Everest National Insurance and the Employment Developmen­t Department, said the District Attorney's Office.

Mikaila Foster also pleaded no contest to the same felony charges. Prosecutor­s said she will be sentenced to one year in county jail and five years of probation April 29.

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