Federal prosecutors on Thursday charged Texas billionaire Robert Brockman with tax fraud in an alleged $2 billion scheme that also ensnared prominent investor Robert Smith.
Department of Justice officials said at a news conference in San Francisco that Brockman, 79, hid the money over 20 years, including filing false returns and setting up secret accounts all over the world to hide and launder money. Brockman is also accused of backdating records, using encrypted communications and communicating in code with a co-conspirator to evade detection.
Smith, who runs private equity and venture capital firm Vista Equity Partners, won praise last year when he pledged to pay off the college debt of graduating seniors from Morehouse University. Now the Justice Department is tying him to what they say is the "largest ever" case of tax evasion by an American ever.
Smith is cooperating in the investigation of Brockman and will pay $139 million to settle a tax probe, prosecutors said. Neither Brockman nor Smith immediately responded to a request for comment.
"Complexity will not hide crime from law enforcement. Sophistication is not a defense to federal criminal charges," David L. Anderson, U.S. attorney for the Northern District of California, said in a statement announcing the charges against Brockman.
"We will not hesitate to prosecute the smartest guys in the room," he said.
Brockman and Smith have known each other for more than a decade. In 2006, Vista Equity, along with Goldman Sachs, helped finance Brockman's $2.8 billion takeover of Dayton, Ohio-based Reynolds and Reynolds. Vista held a stake in Brockman's company for more eight years, selling it in late 2014.
Investor Robert Smith on minority businesses
05:40
In addition to allegations of tax fraud, the Justice Department said Brockman also secretly bought up nearly $70 million of his company's debt. Brockman failed to disclose the debt purchases to other investors as required by law, the agency claims.
Prosecutors also allege that Brockman bought the debt based on insider information unavailable to other investors. The indictment says Brockman convinced another individual to destroy evidence of his debt purchases.