by Joyce E. Cutler and Daniel Gill
Bloomberg News
Nov. 9, 2022, 3:30 AM
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** Nearly a half-billion dollars in claims filed against Girardi Keese firm
** Individual estate’s trustee selling off pricey baubles and assets
Thomas V. Girardi helped win jury awards for people whose lives and bodies were ravaged by plane crashes, explosions, chemicals, and prescription drugs.
But while presenting himself as a premier plaintiffs’ lawyer, the man who helped make Erin Brockovich famous was said to be helping himself to some of the millions of dollars he’d won for others to support a lavish lifestyle including an opulent estate filled with antiques, art and finery.
Girardi regularly used client trust funds “as his personal piggy bank,” said one of two bankruptcy trustees sorting through the more than $700 million in claims filed against the man and his now shuttered law firm. The fund into which client settlement monies are held in trust is at least $23 million short, despite Girardi’s $41 million in deposits, the firm’s trustee Elissa Miller said in court papers.
Over just one decade in his five-decade career, Girardi pilfered at least $14 million in settlement funds alone for himself and for his celebrity ex-wife, Erika Jayne Girardi, the trustee alleged.
In December 2020, the attorney and the Real Housewives of Beverly Hills star were accused in a Chicago federal lawsuit of embezzling money meant for those Girardi Keese LLP was representing in litigation over the 2018 crash of a Lion Air Boeing 737 off the coast of Indonesia. A contempt finding soon followed.
The ensuing downfall was swift. The man and his firm were hauled into bankruptcy. Among the petitioners filing an involuntary bankruptcy against Girardi and the firm was its other name partner, Robert Keese. A California Superior Court judge in June 2021 deemed Girardi incompetent to manage his own affairs, and the following year he was disbarred.
Now two bankruptcy trustees are trying to recover whatever money is left, tied up in assets, or capable of being clawed back to pay victims ranging from widows and orphans to lawyers and accountants harmed by his decades-long spree. To do so, at least in part, they’re liquidating a lifetime of trophies including real estate, jewelry, rare books, a Steinway piano and a Pokemon card.

Bloomberg Law graphic by Jonathan Hurtarte
More than $495 million in claims were filed against the defunct Girardi Keese firm, and another $243 million against Girardi himself. Any funds the trustees obtain will be dwarfed by the hundreds of millions in claims and by the oversight failure that enabled a prominent attorney to continue to practice even as more than 100 grievances were lodged against him.
Last week, in response to a lawsuit from The Times, the State Bar revealed it had received more than 205 complaints against Girardi over four decades; the agency did not take public action until his firm was forced out of business, the records show.
-- Tom Girardi firm’s CFO embezzled $10 million, spent thousands on escort and real estate, prosecutors say, by Matt Hamilton, Harriet Ryan
“When conduct is this awful, it speaks for itself,” said Robert Hillman, a University of California, Davis law professor and authority on legal ethics.
The $8 million obtained in the sale of Girardi’s 10,000-square-foot, seven-bath home on a nearly two-acre Pasadena estate will net about $551,000 after fees, deeds, taxes, and secured claims, Jason Rund, trustee for the individual bankruptcy estate, estimated in a court filing.
The holographic Pokemon card fetched $2,812.50 in a Sept. 21 auction. A 1675 edition of The Famous Works of Nicolas Machiavelli sold for $3,250 and Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England went for $1,000. A pair of men’s Gucci leather shoes sold for $1,062.50. Those items and more brought in $493,341, according to John Moran Auctioneers.
A pair of diamond stud earrings—each six carats—Girardi allegedly bought for his wife with a $750,000 check drawn on a law firm trust account is among the bling and baubles the bankruptcy court approved to be auctioned off on Dec. 7, with an opening bid of $200,000. Erika Girardi is appealing the ruling that permitted the earrings’ sale. The trustee for the firm’s estate has sued Erika Girardi alleging the firm improperly funneled to her $25 million.
[The firm’s trustee Elissa] Miller, in an adversary proceeding, said the ex-lawyer was worse than a “two-bit crook.”

Bloomberg Law graphic by Jonathan Hurtarte
“The $2,000,000 Thomas [V. Girardi] stole from the Lion Air Case plaintiffs, while shocking and unconscionable, is only the tip of the iceberg,” the trustee said.
Dozens of lawyers, including former partners, and law firms are suing Girardi Keese as well as Tom and Erika Girardi, seeking funds owed to them as professionals and their clients. Edelson PC, the Chicago-based law firm that was local counsel in the Lion Air litigation, in July filed a racketeering lawsuit against Girardi Keese, some of its former attorneys, litigation funders, and the Girardis, alleging they operated a long-running Ponzi scheme.
“The Complaint paints a picture of a reverse Robin Hood,” Nora Freeman Engstrom, a Stanford Law School professor who specializes in legal ethics, said in an email. “It depicts a firm stealing from the injured, grieving, and destitute to give to the rich, to fund Tom and Erika Girardi’s lavish lifestyle.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Joyce E. Cutler in San Francisco at [email protected]; Daniel Gill in Washington at [email protected]
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Rob Tricchinelli at [email protected]; Andrew Harris at [email protected]; Maria Chutchian at [email protected]