Advertisement

Former campaign treasurer for O.C. Rep. Dana Rohrabacher pleads not guilty to embezzlement

Share

Jack Wu, a former campaign treasurer for Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, pleaded not guilty Thursday to grand theft, forgery and other charges in connection with Rohrabacher’s accusation that Wu stole campaign funds.

Wu, of Newport Beach, was arrested in February. He is charged with three felony counts of grand theft by embezzlement, 21 felony counts of forgery with sentencing enhancements for theft exceeding $100,000, aggravated white collar crime over $100,000 and property loss of more than $200,000, according to the Orange County district attorney’s office.

If convicted, Wu could face a maximum sentence of 20 years and four months in state prison.

Advertisement

Wu was Rohrabacher’s volunteer treasurer for about seven years. Irregularities in the Costa Mesa Republican’s re-election committee funds surfaced last year, when the campaign manager tried to pay a bill with the committee debit card and it was declined.

The committee discovered it had only $187 in its bank account and that $170,000 was missing, according to the district attorney’s office.

Prosecutors claim Wu stole more than $238,000 from Rohrabacher’s campaign chest.

Wu was accused of using some of the money to pay restitution to a company that had fired him, according to the district attorney’s office.

Rohrabacher replaced Wu as treasurer and froze the committee’s bank account, said the congressman’s attorney, Charles H. Bell Jr.

Previously, Wu started work for Russell Fischer Inc. in 2008 as a controller with a salary of $70,000, the district attorney’s office said. About four years later, he became an independent contractor for Russell Fischer while running his own accounting company, Wubell Services, prosecutors said. His Russell Fischer pay was reduced to $2,000 every two weeks.

Russell Fischer fired Wu in September 2013 amid allegations that he had collected $83,000 in unauthorized payments from the company, the district attorney’s office said. Wu agreed to make restitution payments to the company for a year, according to prosecutors.

Advertisement

Wu has written columns about local politics for the Daily Pilot, the Newport Beach Independent and the Orange County Register.

alexia.fernandez@latimes.com

Fernandez writes for Times Community News.

ALSO

Jaycee Dugard loses court case against federal parole officials

Federal judge denies injunction against California vaccination law for schoolchildren

Advertisement

Tank at Tesoro refinery in Carson blows lid and catches fire

Advertisement