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Texas software tycoon charged in $2-billion tax fraud scheme

Robert and Dorothy Brockman attend a dinner in Houston in 2011.
(Dave Rossman / Houston Chronicle)
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Federal prosecutors have charged Texas software tycoon Robert Brockman in a $2-billion tax fraud scheme that they say is the largest such case against an American.

Department of Justice officials said Thursday that Brockman, 79, hid capital-gains income over 20 years through a web of offshore entities in Bermuda and Nevis and secret bank accounts in Bermuda and Switzerland. Prosecutors said that the CEO of a private-equity firm that aided in the schemes would cooperate with the investigation.

The 39-count indictment unsealed Thursday charges Brockman, the CEO of Ohio-based software company Reynolds and Reynolds, with tax evasion, wire fraud, money-laundering and other offenses.

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Prosecutors also announced that Robert F. Smith, founder and chairman of Vista Equity Partners, would cooperate in the investigation and pay $139 million to settle his own tax probe. Smith, 57, stunned a senior class last year when he promised to wipe out the student-loan debt of the entire graduating class at Morehouse, a historically Black all-male college.

“Complexity will not hide crime from law enforcement. Sophistication is not a defense [against] federal criminal charges,” said David L. Anderson, U.S. attorney for the Northern District of California. “We will not hesitate to prosecute the smartest guys in the room.”

Brockman appeared in federal court from Houston via Zoom on Thursday. He entered a plea of not guilty to all counts and was released on $1 million bond, said Abraham Simmons, spokesman for the Northern District.

The two young men started at the same college, on the same day, and financed their education the same way: by going deep into debt. Their stories reflect a remarkable sequence of events at Morehouse College, a historically black men’s school in Atlanta.

July 24, 2020

“Mr. Brockman has pled not guilty, and we look forward to defending him against these charges,” his attorney, Kathryn Keneally, said in an email.

Prosecutors said that Brockman used encrypted emails with code names, including Permit, Snapper, Redfish and Steelhead, to carry out the fraud and that he ordered evidence to be manipulated or destroyed.

Brockman, a resident of Houston and Pitkin County, Colo., is chairman and CEO of Reynolds and Reynolds, a 4,300-employee company near Dayton, Ohio, that sells accounting, sales and management software to car dealerships. The software helps set up websites, find loans, calculate customer payments, manage payroll and pay bills.

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Reynolds and Reynolds issued a statement saying that the allegations were outside Brockman’s work with the company and that the company is not alleged to have participated in any wrongdoing.

With storefronts closed, supply chains in disarray and the global economy in peril, money laundering schemes are hobbled and cash is piling up in L.A., the city’s top drug enforcement official said.

April 29, 2020

In 2013, a charitable trust set up by Brockman’s late father withdrew a pledged $250-million donation to Centre College, a small liberal arts school in Danville, Ky., where Brockman attended class and once served as chairman of the board of trustees.

At the time, the school said it was due to a “significant capital market event” that didn’t pan out. A spokesman for Reynolds and Reynolds said in 2013 that the event was a proposed refinancing deal involving Vista Equity Partners, Smith’s company.

According to the indictment, Brockman gave an unnamed individual detailed instructions regarding the proposed gift to the college, including talking points, and directed the person to threaten to pull out if his demands were not met. In August, he instructed the person to cancel the gift.

Prosecutors say that Smith used about $2.5 million in untaxed funds to buy and upgrade a vacation home in Sonoma, Calif.; purchase two ski properties in France; and spend $13 million to buy a property and fund charitable activities at his property in Colorado.

Anderson applauded Smith for stepping up, despite the serious nature of his crimes, which occurred from 2000 to mid-2015.

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“Smith’s agreement to cooperate has put him on a path away from indictment,” he said.

In 2019, Smith announced to the graduating class at Morehouse College that he would pay off the student-loan debt of the entire class, saying that he expected the graduates to “pay it forward.” The estimated cost was $40 million.

Forbes lists Smith as No. 461 on its billionaires list, with a net worth of more than $5 billion.

He founded the tech investment firm Vista in 2000 and Forbes reports that it now has more than $50 billion in assets and is “one of the best-performing private equity firms, posting annualized returns of 22% since inception.” Vista has offices in San Francisco and Oakland.

Vista did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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