By John Soltes
Editor-in-Chief
LYNDHURST (June 19, 2009, 1:10 p.m.) —
State Attorney General Anne Milgram announced today, June 19, that a
Lyndhurst lawyer arrested for allegedly stealing $4 million entrusted
to him for real estate closings was sentenced to 15 years in state
prison.
Additionally, the local lawyer — 50-year-old Michael P. Rumore — was
ordered to pay more than $6.2 million in restitution by Superior Court
Judge Harry G. Carroll. Rumore allegedly ran his practice from the
basement of his Travers Place home in Lyndhurst, and he reportedly used the stolen money
to gamble on slot machines in Atlantic City.
Rumore gambled at several different casinos, but Trump's Taj Mahal, Caesar's, Bally's and Harrah's were favorite establishments, Peter Aseltine, Milgram's spokesperson, told The Leader previously.
"Rather than upholding the law and the interests of his clients, as
he was sworn to do as an attorney, this defendant stole $4 million,"
Milgram stated. "We will continue to aggressively prosecute
white-collar crime."
Rumore allegedly stole the millions between April 2007 and August
2008. The money came from several mortgage companies that had entrusted
their funds with the lawyer, the attorney general added. Among Rumore's victims were First American Title Insurance Company and New Jersey Title Insurance Company.
Rumore pleaded guilty Jan. 2 to first-degree money laundering and
second-degree theft by failure to make required disposition of property
received. The lawyer surrendered his license to practice law and was disbarred by the Office of Attorney Ethics in September 2008.
Earlier this year, Rumore's lawyer Albert Alfano said his client was unable to make full restitution. "He's going to try and pay back as much as he could," he said. "There's no way he's going to come close to that."
Rumore could have received 30 years in prison, but state officials previously announced that they were only looking to send the lawyer to prison for 15 years. Alfano was hoping for less than that, saying that his client is "troubled" and suffers from bipolar disorder, depression, diabetes and back problem. His argument appears to have proved unsuccessful.
Alfano said the motive of Rumore's actions was plain a simple: he had a serious gambling problem. "Not a dime of it went anywhere else," Alfano said earlier this year. "He always intended to pay it back."
Rumore had once served as a fire chief in Lyndhurst, though he was not associated with the fire department at the time of the alleged crimes.
— With additional reporting by Susan C. Moeller