Over the next two hours, she built a strategy with the precision of a general arranging supply lines. Immediate revocation of the power of attorney. Formal notice to Desmond and any counsel representing him or the proposed buyer that he lacked authority to act for me. Emergency letters to corporate counsel, board members, and lenders clarifying governance. A forensic audit of account activity. Preparation of civil claims. Preservation notices for texts, emails, meeting notes, acquisition documents, and any communications with Prestige Auto Consortium.
“And,” she said, “we quietly prepare criminal referrals without filing them yet.”
I stared at her.
“You may ultimately decide not to pursue criminal charges,” she said. “But make no mistake—attempting to transfer twenty-three million dollars out of protected accounts using authority he did not have is not a family dispute. It’s bank fraud, wire fraud, attempted financial exploitation, and potentially conspiracy depending on Karen’s role. He needs to understand that.”
I thought of Desmond at five, standing in our backyard with a watering can almost bigger than he was, carefully drowning one tomato plant while Warren laughed and taught him the difference between helping and killing something with enthusiasm. I thought of him at sixteen, hands filthy from changing oil, grinning because Warren had finally trusted him with customer intake alone. I thought of him at twenty-three, crying in my kitchen the day his father was diagnosed because he still believed adults could be saved by wanting it hard enough.
Then I thought of the shell account in Karen’s maiden name.
“Make him understand,” I said.
The meeting was scheduled for the following Tuesday.