Fraud & Forgery

Charged with fraud or forgery?

Fraud cases are document- and record-heavy, and they hinge on intent. Attorney Reinhardt digs into the paper trail to find where the Commonwealth's case falls apart.

What's at stake

"Fraud" covers a family of Massachusetts offenses built on the idea of deception for gain: forgery of documents (G.L. c. 267, § 1), uttering a forged instrument (§ 5), identity fraud (c. 266, § 37E), credit-card fraud, insurance fraud, and larceny by false pretenses. Many are felonies with state-prison exposure and, frequently, restitution orders.

What ties these cases together is intent. The Commonwealth must prove you acted knowingly and with intent to defraud — not that a document was wrong or a transaction went bad. Because these prosecutions rest on records, statements, and financial trails, they are often winnable at the level of intent and knowledge.

How it works

How we defend a fraud charge

These cases are made and unmade in the documents. We read them more closely than anyone.

  1. 01

    Step 1

    Reconstruct the paper trail

    We obtain and analyze the records, communications, and financial documents at the heart of the allegation.

  2. 02

    Step 2

    Attack intent and knowledge

    Mistake, authorization, and good faith are complete defenses to fraud. We show where intent to defraud simply cannot be proven.

    • Can the Commonwealth prove intent to defraud?
    • Was there authorization or a good-faith belief?
    • Do the records actually show what the charge claims?
  3. 03

    Step 3

    Resolve through restitution where possible

    For first offenders, restitution-based and diversionary outcomes can avoid a felony conviction.

  4. 04

    Step 4

    Negotiate or try the case

    We push for dismissal or reduction, and try the case when the evidence should be challenged in front of a jury.

Fraud & forgery questions

I didn't mean to defraud anyone — is that a defense?
It can be a complete defense. Fraud and forgery require a specific intent to deceive. A genuine mistake, a good-faith belief, or authorization to act can defeat the charge entirely.
Are fraud charges felonies?
Many are, with state-prison exposure and restitution. The grading depends on the specific statute and the amount involved. Early defense can affect both the charge and the exposure.
The case is all paperwork — is that good or bad for me?
It can be good. Document-heavy cases give a skilled defense a great deal to work with. The records often show gaps in intent and knowledge that the Commonwealth cannot close.

Charged with fraud or forgery?

The sooner the documents are reviewed, the stronger your defense. Call for a free consultation.