Washington state auditor Troy Kelley holds his wallet after showing his identification as he arrives for a federal court hearing Tuesday in Tacoma. — The Associated Press

Washington state auditor Troy Kelley holds his wallet after showing his identification as he arrives for a federal court hearing Tuesday in Tacoma. — The Associated Press

Judge: Lawyer for state auditor to hold nearly $1 million in returned funds

  • By Gene Johnson The Associated Press
  • Friday, December 4, 2015 12:01am
  • News

By Gene Johnson

The Associated Press

TACOMA — A judge Thursday ordered the Justice Department to turn over nearly $1 million to a lawyer for indicted state Auditor Troy Kelley — but he can’t spend it without permission.

U.S. District Judge Ronald Leighton upbraided federal prosecutors for seizing the money in the first place, saying it had been held in trust by the law firm that previously represented Kelley and there was no danger of the money being used.

“A pretrial seizure of property is an extraordinary step, and it challenges our fundamental belief in a person being deemed innocent until proven guilty,” the judge told assistant U.S. attorneys Richard Cohen and Andrew Friedman.

“We had the money in a blocked account going nowhere. . . . Why did you do it?”

Kelley, a 51-year-old Democrat, is a former state representative who was elected in 2012 to be Washington’s auditor — the state official tasked with rooting out waste and fraud in government operations.

He was indicted this year on money laundering, possession of stolen money and other charges related to his prior operation of a real-estate services firm called Post Closing Department, which tracked certain transactions for mortgage title and escrow firms.

Investigators said Kelley kept fees the company was supposed to refund to homeowners — an amount that totaled at least $3 million from 2006 to 2008 — and paid himself $245,000 a year from the ill-gotten proceeds.

Just before he was indicted last spring on charges including possession of stolen money and filing false income tax returns, Kelley wrote a $447,000 check to the U.S. Treasury Department, noting in the subject line that it would cover future tax debts, and transferred more than $908,000 to a law firm that represented him at the time.

Federal prosecutors seized the money being held by the firm in September.

Kelley’s new attorney, Angelo Calfo, sought its return, arguing that the government did not need the money as evidence and had not demonstrated that it had probable cause to seize it.

Calfo, challenged the legality of the seizure.

After more than two days of testimony by an FBI agent and a forensic accountant, he asked the judge to return the money as well as for permission to spend up to $350,000 of it on legal expenses.

Leighton didn’t go that far, but said Calfo could petition the court later to spend some of it.

The government’s lawyers argued that they seized the money because they didn’t know how Calfo would handle it.

Furthermore, they said, Kelley didn’t have a right to the money because it was traceable to a money-laundering transaction.

The judge said he did not want to opine on that issue for fear of tainting potential jurors in the case.

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