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Corporate Embezzlement: Felony Charges, Investigations, and Restitution



Corporate embezzlement occurs when an employee or executive misappropriates corporate funds they were legally entrusted to manage. When the amount is large enough, it is typically charged as a felony, and it can be prosecuted under state or federal law with the possibility of prison, fines, and restitution. Whether you are facing an accusation or a business confronting suspected embezzlement, the practical questions are when the conduct becomes a felony, how these cases are investigated, and how restitution fits in.

Corporate embezzlement sits at the intersection of criminal law, employment, and corporate finance, and the line between a misdemeanor and a felony usually turns on the value involved and the jurisdiction. The stakes and the defenses depend heavily on the facts, the amounts, and whether the case is state or federal. The right response depends on the evidence, the charge, and the law that applies.


1. What Corporate Embezzlement Means


Corporate embezzlement is the fraudulent conversion of an employer's or company's money or property by someone who was lawfully entrusted with it through their position. What sets it apart from other theft is the element of trust: the person had authorized access, such as a bookkeeper handling accounts or a manager approving payments, and then misappropriated what they were given to manage. The core elements generally are a relationship of trust, lawful possession of the property, fraudulent conversion of it, intent to deprive the owner, and that the property belonged to someone else. If you are assessing a situation, test it against these elements, since the absence of any one of them, especially fraudulent intent, can mean there is no embezzlement at all.

The breach of trust at its heart is what separates embezzlement from simple theft and connects it to broader white collar crime or investigation issues.

ElementWhat It MeansWhy It Matters
Relationship of trustEntrusted with funds or propertyDistinguishes embezzlement from theft
Lawful possessionAccess was authorized at firstThe taking is a later conversion
Fraudulent conversionUsing the property as one's ownThe core wrongful act
Intent to deprivePurpose to permanently takeRequired mental state
Property of anotherBelonged to the employer or companyEstablishes the victim's loss


How Is Embezzlement Different from Theft or Larceny?


Embezzlement differs from theft or larceny mainly in how the person came to possess the property. In larceny or ordinary theft, the person takes property they never had a right to possess, such as cash from a register they were not authorized to access. In embezzlement, the person lawfully possessed or controlled the property because of their position, and the crime is the later fraudulent conversion of it to their own use.

This distinction shapes both the charge and the defense, because the prosecution must show the trust relationship and the conversion, not a trespassory taking. When evaluating a potential charge, look first at how the person obtained access, since that single fact often determines whether the matter is an embezzlement or a theft or larceny case.



What Are Common Forms of Corporate Embezzlement?


Corporate embezzlement takes many forms, usually involving an employee or officer exploiting access to company finances. Common examples include skimming cash before it is recorded, creating fake vendors or invoices and paying them, manipulating payroll, misusing company accounts or credit cards, and falsifying financial records to cover diverted funds. Schemes can be small and one-time or large and sustained over years, often concealed through accounting entries.

Because these schemes hide within ordinary business processes, a company that spots irregularities should preserve the relevant financial records and access logs immediately and bring in a forensic accounting investigation before confronting anyone, since premature confrontation can prompt the destruction of evidence. Knowing the typical patterns also clarifies what conduct an embezzlement charge actually targets.



2. When Corporate Embezzlement Becomes a Felony


Whether embezzlement is charged as a misdemeanor or a felony usually depends on the value of what was taken, along with other factors that vary by jurisdiction. Most states set a dollar threshold above which theft offenses, including embezzlement, become felonies, and many grade felonies into degrees based on the amount, so larger sums bring more serious charges. The same conduct can therefore be a misdemeanor in one place and a felony in another, which is why the amount drives much of the exposure in any embezzlement case.

Because these thresholds and degrees differ by jurisdiction and can change, confirm the current felony cutoff in the relevant jurisdiction before assuming where a given case falls.



What Determines Whether Embezzlement Is a Felony?


What primarily determines whether embezzlement is a felony is the monetary value of the property taken, measured against the threshold and degrees set by the applicable law. In New York, for example, embezzlement-type conduct is prosecuted under the larceny framework, since Penal Law § 155.05 defines larceny to include wrongfully obtaining or withholding another's property with intent to deprive, which covers conduct historically called embezzlement. Grand larceny in the fourth degree under § 155.30 generally begins when the value exceeds $1,000, and grand larceny in the third degree under § 155.35 applies above $3,000, with higher degrees for larger amounts. In Washington, D.C., theft in the first degree can apply where the value is $1,000 or more, and repeated thefts within a six-month period may be aggregated into a single offense.

Beyond value, factors like the total amount across a scheme, the number of incidents, and the position of trust abused can influence the charge. Because the figures and grading vary by jurisdiction and can change, confirm the precise threshold under current law rather than relying on a general number, keeping in mind how a felony theft, grand larceny, or embezzlement charge is graded.



When Is Embezzlement a Federal Crime?


Embezzlement becomes a federal crime when it involves federal interests, such as federal funds, federally insured banks, or organizations receiving federal money. Federal embezzlement exposure may arise under statutes such as 18 U.S.C. § 641 for U.S. .overnment money or property, 18 U.S.C. § 656 for theft, embezzlement, or misapplication by bank officers or employees, and 18 U.S.C. § 666 for theft or bribery involving organizations or programs receiving federal funds. Federal cases can also involve related charges like mail or wire fraud where those means were used.

Federal prosecutions often involve significant investigative resources and serious penalties. If an embezzlement matter touches federal money, a bank, or a federally funded organization, federal criminal exposure should be evaluated from the outset, including which specific statutes may apply and how they interact, an area addressed through federal criminal defense.



3. Evidence, Internal Investigations, and Financial Records


An embezzlement matter is built on financial records, and how those records are preserved and interpreted often determines the outcome. Businesses usually begin with an internal review when they suspect embezzlement, and criminal investigations follow when the matter is reported, drawing heavily on accounting and transaction evidence. For an accused person, the same records become the focus of the defense, particularly on the question of intent.

Because these cases are document-intensive and turn on intent, both sides depend on the records and how they are explained. Anyone under investigation should avoid explaining the records to investigators before getting advice, since early statements can be hard to walk back.



How Are Embezzlement Cases Investigated?


Embezzlement cases are usually investigated through close examination of financial records, since the conduct hides within transactions and accounts. A company that suspects embezzlement often starts by reviewing books, bank records, invoices, and access logs, sometimes with outside accountants or counsel. If the matter proceeds, law enforcement conducts its own investigation, which can involve subpoenas, forensic accounting, and interviews to trace the flow of funds and establish who diverted them and how.

Because the evidence is largely documentary, reconstructing the money trail is central to both proving and defending a case. A business that suspects wrongdoing should run a structured internal investigation, with the records preserved and reviewed, before deciding whether to confront the employee, report to authorities, or pursue civil recovery.



What Should a Business Preserve before Confronting an Employee?


Before confronting a suspected employee, a business should secure the evidence, because a premature confrontation can lead to deleted records, moved funds, or a resignation that complicates recovery. Preserve the relevant financial records, bank statements, invoices, emails, and system access logs, and restrict the employee's access to financial systems where appropriate, without tipping off the investigation. Documenting what is known, and when, helps support both any later criminal referral and a civil recovery claim.

It is also worth assessing the scope of the loss and reviewing any insurance or fidelity bond coverage early, since that can affect both strategy and recovery. Confront the employee only after the records are secured and the situation has been assessed, ideally with guidance, so that the response does not undermine the company's options.



4. Defenses, Restitution, and Civil Recovery


The back end of an embezzlement matter involves the defenses available to an accused person and the recovery options available to a business, which often run on parallel criminal and civil tracks. For the accused, the defense usually centers on intent and the interpretation of the financial records. For the business, recovery can involve restitution in a criminal case, a separate civil claim, or insurance, and these can proceed alongside or independently of the criminal process.

Because the criminal and civil aspects can move separately, understanding how defenses and recovery fit together helps both sides set realistic expectations. The financial records, once again, tend to drive the analysis on both tracks.



What Are the Defenses to an Embezzlement Charge?


The defenses to an embezzlement charge often center on the required mental state, because the prosecution must prove fraudulent intent, not just a financial discrepancy. A genuine accounting error, sloppy recordkeeping, or an authorized use of funds is not embezzlement, since the crime requires a deliberate, fraudulent conversion rather than a mistake. A common defense is therefore lack of intent, and a related one is claim of right, meaning a good-faith belief that the money or property belonged to the defendant or that the use was authorized, either of which can negate the intent the crime requires.

Other defenses challenge whether a conversion actually occurred, whether the person truly had the necessary authority, or whether the financial evidence supports the accusation. Anyone accused should preserve their own documentation showing authorization or an innocent explanation early, because intent is often the central defense issue.



Can Restitution or Settlement Resolve an Embezzlement Case?


Restitution and civil settlement play an important role in embezzlement matters, though they do not necessarily eliminate criminal liability. Repaying the misappropriated funds is often part of resolving the situation, and courts frequently order restitution as part of a sentence; in practice, where embezzlement is charged as grand larceny, prosecutors commonly seek restitution as part of a negotiated plea when the accused has the means to pay. A business may also pursue a separate civil claim to recover its losses, sometimes framed as a breach of fiduciary duty action, in addition to or instead of a criminal referral.

Paying back the money, however, does not automatically end a criminal case, since prosecution is controlled by the government rather than the victim. Repayment may influence charging or sentencing decisions, but neither side should treat it as a guaranteed resolution, and both should understand how the criminal and civil tracks can proceed independently before relying on a payment to settle the matter.



5. When a Corporate Embezzlement Matter Needs Legal Review


Corporate embezzlement matters almost always warrant careful attention, because the consequences are serious on both sides and the cases turn on detailed financial evidence. For an accused person, a felony charge threatens prison, fines, restitution, and a lasting record. For a business, embezzlement can mean significant losses and difficult decisions about investigation, reporting, and recovery.

Legal review is especially valuable when a person is under investigation or charged, when the amount pushes the matter into felony or federal territory, when financial records are complex or disputed, when a business has uncovered suspected embezzlement, or when restitution, settlement, or parallel civil claims are in play. The two H3s below address the most common first questions on each side.



What Should an Accused Person Do before Speaking to Investigators?


An accused person should generally seek legal advice before speaking with investigators, because early statements about financial records can be difficult to walk back and intent is usually the central issue. It is reasonable to be cautious about explaining transactions, signing documents, or agreeing to interviews until the records and the potential exposure have been reviewed. Preserving one's own documentation, such as approvals, communications, and anything showing authorization or an innocent explanation, can be valuable to the defense.

Because what looks like an error to one side may look intentional to another, how the records are explained matters a great deal. Getting guidance before engaging with investigators helps an accused person avoid inadvertently strengthening the case against them.



What Should a Company Do after Discovering Missing Funds?


After discovering missing funds, a company should focus first on preserving evidence and assessing the situation before acting. That means securing financial records, bank statements, invoices, and access logs, evaluating the scope and amount of the loss, and reviewing any insurance or fidelity bond coverage that may apply. Decisions about confronting the employee, reporting to law enforcement, and pursuing civil recovery are best made after the facts are understood, since acting prematurely can compromise both evidence and recovery.

A company can often begin with an internal investigation, but reporting and recovery decisions should weigh the employment, civil, and criminal implications together. Moving deliberately, and getting advice early, helps protect both the company's evidence and its options for recovery.



6. Frequently Asked Questions about Corporate Embezzlement


These questions come from people accused of embezzlement and from businesses dealing with suspected embezzlement who want to understand how the law works.



What Is Corporate Embezzlement?


Corporate embezzlement is the fraudulent conversion of an employer's or company's money or property by someone lawfully entrusted with it through their position. Unlike ordinary theft, it begins with authorized access, which the person then misuses for their own benefit. Its core elements are a relationship of trust, lawful possession, fraudulent conversion, intent to deprive, and that the property belonged to another. Because it abuses a position of trust within a company's finances, it is treated as a serious white-collar offense under state and federal law.



When Does Embezzlement Become a Felony?


Embezzlement usually becomes a felony when the value of what was taken exceeds a threshold set by the applicable law, which varies by jurisdiction. In New York, embezzlement is prosecuted under the larceny statutes, where grand larceny generally begins above $1,000, while other jurisdictions set different cutoffs and degrees. Above the threshold, the charge becomes a felony, often divided into degrees so larger sums carry more serious classifications and penalties. Because the figures and grading differ and can change, the felony threshold for a specific case should be confirmed under current law rather than assumed.



Can Embezzlement Be Charged As Grand Larceny?


Yes, in some jurisdictions embezzlement-type conduct is charged under larceny statutes rather than under a separately named embezzlement offense. New York is a notable example, where the larceny framework defines stealing to include wrongfully obtaining or withholding another's property with intent to deprive, which covers conduct historically called embezzlement. Depending on the value involved, that conduct can be charged as grand larceny in varying degrees. Whether a particular case is labeled embezzlement, larceny, or grand larceny depends on the jurisdiction's statutes and the facts, but the underlying conduct, misappropriating entrusted funds, is the same.



Is an Accounting Error or Mistake Considered Embezzlement?


No, a genuine accounting error or honest mistake is generally not embezzlement, because the crime requires fraudulent intent, not merely a discrepancy in the books. Embezzlement involves a deliberate conversion of entrusted funds for one's own benefit, so missing money caused by sloppy recordkeeping, a clerical error, or a good-faith belief that a use was authorized does not, by itself, meet the legal standard. This is why intent is so central and often the main battleground in these cases. What looks like an error to one side may look intentional to another, so anyone facing an accusation rooted in disputed bookkeeping should preserve the documents that explain the transactions.



Is Corporate Embezzlement the Same As Accounting Fraud?


Not always. Corporate embezzlement involves misappropriating funds or property that were entrusted to a person, while accounting fraud generally involves falsifying records to misstate a company's financial condition, often to deceive investors, lenders, or regulators. The two are distinct offenses with different aims, but they can overlap when false accounting entries are used to conceal embezzlement. In that situation, the same scheme may give rise to both embezzlement and fraud-related charges. Because the conduct and the charges can differ, identifying exactly what occurred, misappropriation, falsification, or both, matters for understanding the legal exposure involved.



Does Paying the Money Back Stop an Embezzlement Case?


Paying the money back may affect negotiations or sentencing, but it does not automatically end a criminal case because prosecution is controlled by the government. Restitution is often part of resolving an embezzlement situation, and courts frequently order it as part of a sentence, while a business may also pursue civil recovery. A business choosing not to pursue a referral, or full repayment, can sometimes influence charging or sentencing decisions, but none of that guarantees a case will be dropped once law enforcement is involved. Because the criminal and civil tracks can proceed separately, repayment should not be assumed to end potential criminal liability.


10 Dec, 2025


The information provided in this article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Reading or relying on the contents of this article does not create an attorney-client relationship with our firm. For advice regarding your specific situation, please consult a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.
Certain informational content on this website may utilize technology-assisted drafting tools and is subject to attorney review.

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