After charging owner Michael Segal for insurance and mail fraud in a scheme to allegedly embezzle $24 million from the company’s reserve fund, federal prosecutors are now charging the company itself with seven counts each of the same charges, according to Crain’s Chicago Business.
Segal’s accountant, Daniel Watkins, has also been charged with one count of embezzling Near North funds.
Segal’s trial was scheduled to begin soon but now will likely be postponed. Segal had signed a letter of intent to sell the insurance brokerage, part of Chicago-based Near North National Group, to the equity investment firm of Frontenac Co. It’s unclear how the new charges will affect the pending sale.
According to Crain’s, which attained a copy of the superceding indictment filed the U.S. Northern District Attorney’s Office, Segal allegedly embezzled the Near North money by running it through a bogus postal stamp account purportedly for business purposes. In actuality, prosecutors allege, the money was going to fund political friends’ campaigns and for personal use.
Topics Fraud
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Chubb Q1 Net Income Increases 74% on Fewer Catastrophe Losses
Three Sentenced in Bear-Suit Attacks Insurance Fraud Case
State High Court Weighs in on Woman Taken for Organ Donation But Was Still Alive
Viewpoint: Why Brokers Have Little to Fear and Everything to Gain From AI 

