Fraud claims require precision
When money changed hands because someone lied, concealed material facts, manipulated information, forged records, or abused trust, the case may be more than a contract dispute. But fraud claims must be built carefully around proof.
- False inducement and concealment
- Misrepresented financial condition
- Diversion of funds or business opportunities
- Forged or manipulated records
- Dishonest business practices
- Fraud-related counterclaims and defenses
The timeline matters
A business fraud case often depends on what was said, when it was said, who heard it, what documents existed at the time, what the client relied on, and how the money moved after the representation was made.
We build the case around what can be proven
Strong fraud litigation requires documentary support, witness development, damages analysis, and a disciplined theory that can survive motion practice and discovery.