Lawyer charged in billionaire's tax case committed suicide

A Houston lawyer's death a day before he was to go on trial for allegedly helping billionaire Robert F. Smith evade taxes was a suicide, according to a medical examiner's report. 

Carlos Kepke died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head, in a bedroom at his home on Sunday, according to the website of the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences. 

Kepke was 83. He was set to go on trial Monday in San Francisco federal court on charges of conspiring to defraud the Internal Revenue Service and aiding and abetting the filing of false tax returns by Smith, founder of Vista Equity Partners.

Kepke's lawyers and a spokesperson for Smith didn't immediately respond to requests for comment on the medical examiner's ruling.

"Carlos always maintained that he was innocent of these charges, and we were prepared to prove that at trial," Kepke attorney Richard Strassberg said in an interview Monday.

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Robert Smith, billionaire and chairman and CEO of Vista Equity Partners LLC
Jason Alden/Bloomberg

Kepke had also worked for the family of billionaire Robert Brockman. Brockman was charged two years ago in the largest individual tax fraud case in US history. A software entrepreneur and original investor in Vista, he died in August before his trial. He was 81 and had been suffering from dementia.

The judge is expected to dismiss the case after the Justice Department files a formal request. The department declined to comment.

A graduate of the University of Texas law school, Kepke advised high-net-worth clients at a prominent Houston firm specializing in tax law before setting up his own practice in 1992. He focused on "the use of foreign structures for United States tax savings and/or asset protection," according to his website. 

He had extensive health problems and had suffered two heart attacks.

Bloomberg News
Tax Tax fraud Tax evasion Tax-related court cases
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