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Former manager at the Art Institute of Chicago accused of stealing $2m from the museum

The former employee faces four federal charges over an alleged fraud scheme that went on for 13 years

Benjamin Sutton
17 January 2023
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The main entrance of the Art Institute of Chicago Photo by Danny Burke on Unsplash

The main entrance of the Art Institute of Chicago Photo by Danny Burke on Unsplash

A former payroll manager at the Art Institute of Chicago has been accused of stealing upwards of $2m from the museum over the course of a fraud that lasted more than a decade.

On 13 January, federal prosecutors in Illinois charged Michael Maurello with two counts of wire fraud and two counts of bank fraud for the alleged actions, which they say began in 2007 and continued through 2020. Each bank fraud charge carries a maximum sentence of 30 years in federal prison, while each wire fraud charge is punishable by up to 20 years in prison.

According to the indictment, Maurello directed payroll payments to his personal bank account while designating the payments as being made to other or former employees in the museum’s payroll system. He concealed the payments by providing false motives (such as payment for accrued vacation time) and editing bank information of current and former employees in the museum’s payroll systems.

A spokesperson for the museum told the Chicago Sun-Times that the abnormal account activity first came to light in 2019. The scheme began to unravel in January 2020, when an assistant controller at the museum asked Maurello about a transfer to a former employee. Maurello claimed it had only been a test of the payroll system, then allegedly altered a payroll report to conceal information about the payment’s ultimate destination. He was subsequently fired and flagged to law enforcement agents.

“The cumulative loss was significant,” the spokesperson told the Sun-Times, “but because of the length of time and manner in which it was taken, it did not impact decisions around staffing, payroll, scholarship funding, programming or other financial aspects of the organisation.”

The museum will recover the funds through insurance.

Art crimeArt Institute of ChicagoFraudMuseums & Heritage
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