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Former Controller of Medical Nonprofit Is Charged With Embezzling $1.8 Million

A former official of the Hereditary Disease Foundation, a New York-based nonprofit group that supports research into genetic illness, has been charged with embezzling more than $1.8 million of the organization’s funds and using the money for personal expenses.

The former official, Karen Alameddine, 57, served as the organization’s controller until she resigned this year. She had almost exclusive responsibility for overseeing various aspects of the foundation’s financial affairs, the government said, including delivering grant money to researchers and paying the organization’s bills.

Federal prosecutors in Manhattan said in a criminal complaint unsealed on Tuesday that Ms. Alameddine began diverting money by disguising entries in the foundation’s accounting software “to make what in reality were transfers to her personal bank account appear as if they were wire or bank transfers” to grant recipients.

The government said Ms. Alameddine, who also went by Karen Dean, worked for the organization in recent years from her residence in Perris, Calif. The funds she diverted went into accounts she controlled with names like Abacus Accounting, Chez Cheval Ranch, Dean & Co. and Karen Dean Exports, the complaint said.

Ms. Alameddine was arrested Monday night in Boston, and appeared in federal court there on Tuesday, where she was held pending her transfer to Manhattan, according to the United States attorney’s office for the Southern District of New York. Her federal public defender in Boston, Stellio Sinnis, declined to comment on Tuesday.

The scheme began to unwind this year, the complaint said, after Ms. Alameddine left her job, and the foundation received a call from a grant recipient who said that he had not received his check from the foundation.

The foundation discovered that its bank statements showed an online wire transfer, “purportedly representing the grant amount, which had been fraudulently diverted to Alameddine’s personal bank account,” the complaint said.

The foundation said in a statement that Ms. Alameddine had served as controller from September 2005 through January 2014, and that its current controller uncovered several months ago what appeared to be fraudulent transactions. “This loss was confirmed by a thorough internal investigation and a forensic audit conducted by outside legal counsel retained immediately by the foundation,” the statement said.

It also said that the internal investigation had determined that “although the theft was substantial, only a small amount of grant monies committed before 2014 was compromised.” The complaint says Ms. Alameddine further concealed her fraud “by creating, apparently out of whole cloth, a fictitious accounting firm named Davis & Greene, based in Washington, D.C.,” to prepare some of the foundation’s tax returns.

Ms. Alameddine was charged with one count of wire fraud and five counts of tax evasion, according to the complaint, which was signed by Stanley J. Okula Jr., a prosecutor, and Virginia A. Colombo, a United States postal inspector. Ms. Alameddine used some of the diverted money for car, utility and mortgage payments, the document said.

The foundation’s recent tax returns show that Ms. Alameddine received annual compensation of about $115,000. The complaint charges that she did not report the more than $1.8 million she was accused of embezzling.

The foundation’s website says that the organization has given more than $50 million to support research in genetics, gene therapy, molecular and cell biology. In 1993, researchers affiliated with the group played a key role in the discovery of the gene for Huntington’s disease, which afflicts tens of thousands of Americans.

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 23 of the New York edition with the headline: Ex-Official of Medical Nonprofit Is Charged With Embezzlement. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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