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{{Infobox Person
{{Infobox Person
|name = Walt Pavlo
|name = Walter "Walt" Pavlo Jr.
|birth_date =  
|birth_date = 1965
|birth_place =  
|birth_place = West Virginia
|charges = Wire fraud, Money laundering, Obstruction of justice
|charges = Wire fraud, Money laundering, Obstruction of justice
|sentence = 41 months (served approximately 2 years)
|sentence = 41 months (served approximately 2 years)
|facility = FPC Jesup, FPC Edgefield
|facility = Federal Prison Camp, Edgefield
|status = Released
|status = Released
}}
}}
'''Walter "Walt" Pavlo Jr.''' (born 1965) is an American author, speaker, and white-collar crime expert who served approximately two years in federal prison after pleading guilty to wire fraud, money laundering, and obstruction of justice for his role in a $6 million embezzlement scheme while working as a senior manager at MCI Communications in the mid-1990s.<ref name="abc-pavlo">ABC News, "Walt Pavlo: The Visiting Fellow of Fraud," August 2006, https://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/Business/story?id=1557957.</ref> Pavlo, who had been responsible for billing and collection of nearly $1 billion in monthly revenue at MCI, devised a scheme with a colleague to siphon money from delinquent customer accounts into offshore accounts in the Cayman Islands. After his crimes were discovered and he pleaded guilty in 2001, Pavlo served his sentence at Federal Prison Camp Edgefield in South Carolina. Since his release, he has become one of the most prominent voices on white-collar crime, authoring the book "Stolen Without a Gun" with Forbes journalist Neil Weinberg in 2007, teaching at business schools, contributing regularly to Forbes on criminal justice topics, and speaking to corporate audiences, law enforcement, and professional organizations about fraud, ethics, and the psychology of white-collar criminals.<ref name="mondaq-pavlo">Mondaq, "Walt Pavlo: Daylight Fraud," February 2018, https://www.mondaq.com/uk/white-collar-crime-anti-corruption-fraud/646062/walt-pavlo-daylight-fraud.</ref><ref name="journalofaccountancy">Journal of Accountancy, "Stolen Without a Gun," December 2007, https://www.journalofaccountancy.com/issues/2007/dec/stolenwithoutagun/.</ref>


'''Walter "Walt" Pavlo Jr.''' is an American [[Prison_Consultants|prison consultant]], author, public speaker, and Forbes contributor who served two years in federal prison after pleading guilty in January 2001 to wire fraud, money laundering, and obstruction of justice.<ref name="winthrop-pavlo">Winthrop University, "Whitton Executive Series Features Fraud Expert Walt Pavlo Jr.," accessed November 2025, https://www.winthrop.edu/news-events/whitton-executive-series-features-fraud-expert-walt-pavlo.aspx.</ref> As a senior manager at MCI Telecommunications responsible for billing and collecting nearly $1 billion in monthly revenue, Pavlo participated in a scheme that embezzled $6 million from MCI customers, funneling the funds to accounts in the Cayman Islands.<ref name="abc-nightline">ABC News Nightline, "Walt Pavlo: The Visiting Fellow of Fraud," February 27, 2006, https://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/Business/story?id=1557957.</ref> Since his release in 2003, Pavlo has become a nationally recognized speaker on white-collar crime and business ethics, co-authored the book "Stolen Without A Gun," co-founded the prison consulting firm Prisonology LLC, and established 500 Pearl Street, a speaker bureau and crisis management firm specializing in white-collar criminal matters.<ref name="linkedin-pavlo">LinkedIn, "Walter Pavlo," accessed November 2025, https://www.linkedin.com/in/walter-pavlo-0875115/.</ref>
== Early Life and Education ==
 
Walt Pavlo Jr. was born in 1965 in West Virginia, where he was raised before pursuing higher education and a career in corporate finance. Details about his early education and formative years shaped his eventual path to MCI Communications, where he would rise to a position of significant financial responsibility before his criminal conduct. His background in finance and accounting provided the technical skills that would later enable both his corporate success and his ability to execute a sophisticated fraud scheme.


== Summary ==
== Summary ==


Walt Pavlo's criminal conduct occurred at MCI Communications (later part of WorldCom) during the mid-1990s, when he served as a senior manager overseeing the billing and collection of accounts receivable for the company's carrier finance division. Under pressure from senior executives to minimize the visibility of over $100 million in bad debts and limit write-offs, Pavlo first engaged in accounting gimmicks to hide delinquencies on behalf of the company, then conspired with an outside associate to profit personally from the same techniques.<ref name="icsa-pavlo">ICSA: The Governance Institute, "Walt Pavlo: Daylight fraud," accessed November 2025, https://www.icsa.org.uk/knowledge/governance-and-compliance/features/walt-pavlo-white-collar-crime-fraud-money-laundering.</ref> After cooperating with federal investigators, Pavlo served his sentence at Federal Prison Camps in Jesup, Georgia and Edgefield, South Carolina. His case gained renewed attention when it was featured in Forbes magazine in June 2002, just weeks before WorldCom disclosed over $7 billion in accounting irregularities, ultimately leading to the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history at that time.<ref name="amazon-book">Amazon, "Stolen Without A Gun," accessed November 2025, https://www.amazon.com/Stolen-Without-Gun-Confessions-accounting/dp/0979755808.</ref>
Walt Pavlo's story represents a classic case study in how otherwise law-abiding corporate employees can rationalize increasingly serious criminal conduct. He did not set out to become a white-collar criminal; rather, he progressively descended into fraud through a series of rationalizations that allowed him to convince himself that his actions were justified or at least excusable. His subsequent career as a fraud educator has given him a platform to explain the psychology of white-collar crime from the inside, helping organizations understand how to prevent employees from following the same path.<ref name="deseret-pavlo">Deseret News, "Former MCI manager recalls life of crime," January 10, 2008, https://www.deseret.com/2008/1/10/20063556/former-mci-manager-recalls-life-of-crime/.</ref>


== Background ==
Pavlo's fraud at MCI began with what he later characterized as a corrupt corporate culture that encouraged employees to manipulate financial results. He learned techniques for hiding bad debts and making the company's financial performance appear better than it actually was. When he began diverting money to his own accounts, he rationalized the theft by telling himself that MCI was corrupt anyway, that he was underpaid for his work, and that the company could afford the losses. These rationalizations allowed him to cross ethical and legal lines that he would have considered unthinkable at the start of his career, illustrating the incremental nature of white-collar crime and the power of self-justification in enabling criminal behavior.<ref name="winthrop-pavlo">Winthrop University, "Whitton Executive Series Features Fraud Expert Walt Pavlo Jr.," https://www.winthrop.edu/news-events/whitton-executive-series-features-fraud-expert-walt-pavlo.aspx.</ref>


Pavlo earned a Bachelor of Science in Industrial Engineering from West Virginia University.<ref name="winthrop-pavlo" /> He subsequently obtained a Master of Business Administration in Finance from Mercer University's Stetson School of Business and Economics.<ref name="winthrop-pavlo" /> He was raised in a devoutly religious Catholic family and attended Catholic schools throughout his childhood.<ref name="abc-nightline" />
Since his release from prison, Pavlo has built a career helping others understand how white-collar crime happens and how organizations can prevent it. He has spoken at more than 100 universities, corporate events, and professional conferences, and has consulted with law enforcement agencies including the FBI. His willingness to discuss his crimes frankly and to explain the thought processes that led him to steal has made him a valuable resource for fraud prevention education.<ref name="ualr-pavlo">University of Arkansas at Little Rock School of Business, "Former MCI WorldCom Exec Convicted of Fraud Presents to 100," October 26, 2009, https://ualr.edu/business/2009/10/26/worldcom/.</ref>


Following his education, Pavlo began his career at GEC Avionics, Inc., a division of GEC Ltd., where he served as a senior contract manager negotiating contracts for high-tech military equipment with prime contractors including Lockheed, Rockwell, and General Dynamics.<ref name="pavlo-bio">The Pros and The Cons, "Walter Pavlo Bio," accessed November 2025, http://www.theprosandthecons.com/articlepdfs/walterpavlobio.pdf.</ref> His international assignments included contract negotiations in Great Britain, South Korea, Egypt, and Israel.<ref name="pavlo-bio" />
== Career at MCI Communications ==


In 1992, Pavlo joined a subsidiary of MCI Communications in Atlanta, Georgia, as a finance executive.<ref name="icsa-pavlo" /> He was hired into a four-person carrier finance department and rose rapidly within the organization. By 1995, he had been promoted to senior manager, and the department had grown to 120 people, reflecting MCI's tremendous growth during the telecommunications boom of the 1990s.<ref name="global-treasurer">The Global Treasurer, "Cooking the Books: A Convicted Fraudster Tells his Tale," September 6, 2004, https://www.theglobaltreasurer.com/2004/09/06/cooking-the-books-a-convicted-fraudster-tells-his-tale/.</ref>
=== Early Career and Advancement ===


Pavlo's role at MCI involved overseeing the billing and collection of approximately $1 billion in monthly accounts receivable from the company's carrier finance division, which served telecommunications resellers who purchased MCI's long-distance services in bulk and resold them to end customers.<ref name="ualr-pavlo">University of Arkansas at Little Rock, "Former MCI WorldCom Exec Convicted of Fraud Presents to 100," October 26, 2009, https://ualr.edu/business/2009/10/26/worldcom/.</ref>
In 1992, Walt Pavlo Jr. joined MCI Communications, which would later become part of WorldCom and eventually the second-largest telecommunications company in the United States. Pavlo quickly impressed his supervisors with his financial acumen and work ethic, earning rapid promotions within the organization. He was promoted to become second in command of the carrier finance division, where he was responsible for billing and collection of nearly $1 billion in monthly revenue. This position placed him in control of substantial financial flows and gave him authority over how customer accounts were managed and recorded.<ref name="mondaq-pavlo" />


== Criminal Conduct at MCI ==
MCI's carrier finance division dealt with wholesale customers—other telecommunications companies that purchased network capacity from MCI. Managing accounts receivable in this division involved substantial amounts of money and required judgment about how to handle delinquent accounts. Pavlo's position gave him both the opportunity and the authority to manipulate how customer debts were recorded and managed. The division's operations involved complex inter-carrier settlements and provided multiple opportunities for financial manipulation by someone with inside knowledge of the systems and processes.


=== Corporate Pressure and Bad Debt ===
=== Corporate Culture and Rationalization ===


As MCI grew rapidly during the telecommunications boom, so did its delinquencies. Pavlo was responsible for collecting past-due accounts from large business customers, many of whom were high-risk "tier three" resellers with no credit history.<ref name="global-treasurer" /> These resellers were launching products such as debit and prepaid calling cards, international calling plans, and profitable adult entertainment telephone services.
According to Pavlo's own accounts in subsequent interviews and in his book, the corporate culture at MCI in the mid-1990s tolerated and even encouraged manipulation of financial results. He was taught techniques for hiding bad debts from customers who were unlikely to pay, allowing the company to report better financial performance than reality warranted. This culture of manipulation, Pavlo has argued, set the stage for his own criminal conduct by normalizing dishonesty and creating an environment where ethical boundaries became increasingly blurred.<ref name="abc-pavlo" />


According to Pavlo, MCI's senior executives decided to lower credit requirements to tier three accounts to capture market share, even though many of these customers owned no equipment or buildings and were "like virtual companies."<ref name="global-treasurer" /> As a result, Pavlo saw a growing problem with high default rates on these accounts.
Pavlo's rationalization process illustrates how white-collar criminals often drift into crime rather than making a conscious decision to become criminals. He convinced himself that the manipulations he was performing were acceptable because everyone else was doing them, that the company was treating him unfairly by not paying him what he deserved, and that MCI was so large and profitable that his theft would not really harm anyone. These cognitive distortions are typical of white-collar offenders who maintain a law-abiding self-image while engaging in serious criminal conduct. The gradual escalation from questionable accounting practices to outright theft demonstrates how corporate environments that tolerate small ethical compromises can enable larger frauds.


Pavlo contends he was pressured by MCI senior executives to minimize the visibility of approximately $120 million in bad debts and limit bad debt write-offs to $15 million per year in order to attract a favorable takeover bid—MCI was in discussions with British Telecom and later WorldCom about potential mergers.<ref name="bartleby-pavlo">Bartleby, "The Case Of Walt Pavlo," accessed November 2025, https://www.bartleby.com/essay/The-Case-Of-Walt-Pavlo-PKK2GHW5UKDX.</ref>
== The Fraud Scheme ==


=== Accounting Gimmicks ===
=== Diverting Customer Payments ===


Pavlo alleges that he was taught by colleagues how to hide the debts of some of MCI's worst-performing customers using various accounting techniques. One method involved crediting the delinquent receivable and debiting a new one, which effectively brought the account current without any actual payment being received.<ref name="journal-accountancy">Journal of Accountancy, "Stolen Without a Gun" (Book Review), December 2007, https://www.journalofaccountancy.com/issues/2007/dec/stolenwithoutagun/.</ref>
In 1996, Pavlo and a colleague devised a scheme to profit from their positions at MCI. They identified customers with substantial overdue balances who were unlikely to pay their full debts and offered to "resolve" these debts in exchange for payments to accounts controlled by Pavlo and his colleague rather than to MCI. The scheme essentially involved extorting payments from delinquent customers in exchange for making their debts disappear from MCI's records. Customers who agreed to participate paid a portion of what they owed, benefiting from debt reduction, while Pavlo and his accomplice pocketed the payments instead of remitting them to MCI.<ref name="deseret-pavlo" />


Pavlo has stated that the corporate culture at MCI rewarded those who "kept giving the answer they wanted to hear" without asking how results were obtained, which he characterizes as the company being "partially culpable" in creating conditions for fraud.<ref name="icsa-pavlo" />
The payments were routed to accounts in the Cayman Islands, where they could be concealed from U.S. authorities and from MCI's internal auditors. Over approximately six months, Pavlo and his colleague diverted approximately $6 million from MCI customers using this scheme. The offshore accounts were structured to obscure the true ownership and to make tracing the funds difficult for investigators. This sophisticated use of offshore banking demonstrated a level of planning and premeditation that distinguished Pavlo's conduct from impulsive theft.


=== The Embezzlement Scheme ===
=== Discovery and Investigation ===
 
In 1996, Pavlo formed a relationship with Harold Mann, a delinquent MCI customer who proposed a scheme to profit from the situation.<ref name="journal-accountancy" /> Beginning in March 1996, Pavlo, one member of his staff, and Mann perpetrated a fraud involving seven MCI customers over a six-month period.
 
The scheme worked as follows: Pavlo would pressure MCI customers who were struggling to pay their bills, telling them they would be disconnected if they did not pay. Mann would then appear as an "angel investor," offering to pay off their MCI debt in exchange for an upfront fee and ongoing monthly payments sent to bank accounts in the Cayman Islands.<ref name="leoweekly-pavlo">LEO Weekly, "Pavlo's slog: Trying to move on, a convicted felon shares his cautionary tale with impressionable minds," accessed November 2025, https://www.leoweekly.com/news/pavloa-tms-slog-trying-to-move-on-a-convicted-felon-shares-his-cautionary-tale-with-impressionable-minds-15756234.</ref>


To conceal the crime from MCI's auditors, Pavlo developed a lapping scheme that worked by applying payments from good customers to the accounts of those who had entered into the illegal arrangement.<ref name="journal-accountancy" />
The scheme was eventually discovered through internal controls when accounts that were written off raised questions after customers subsequently claimed they had made payments. MCI's internal audit team began investigating the discrepancies, and the investigation revealed Pavlo's role in the fraud. The discovery led to a federal investigation involving multiple agencies examining the wire fraud, money laundering, and obstruction of justice aspects of the case.<ref name="mondaq-pavlo" />


The fraudulent proceeds totaled $6 million. Pavlo began living according to his newfound means: an expensive new car, hand-tailored Italian suits, chartered airplanes, and regular vacations, often to the Cayman Islands.<ref name="abc-nightline" />
Pavlo's arrest and prosecution occurred during a period of heightened scrutiny of corporate fraud following high-profile scandals in the telecommunications and technology sectors. His case was one of many that exposed problems in corporate finance and internal controls during the late 1990s and early 2000s. MCI itself would later be acquired by WorldCom, which collapsed in 2002 in one of the largest accounting frauds in American history, involving $11 billion in misstatements. While Pavlo's fraud was unrelated to WorldCom's later accounting scandal, both cases highlighted systemic problems in the telecommunications industry's financial practices during this period.


=== Discovery and Investigation ===
== Indictment, Prosecution, and Sentencing ==


Approximately six months into the fraud, MCI's accounting department uncovered the scheme when auditors noticed strange transactions involving Pavlo and the Cayman Islands accounts.<ref name="abc-nightline" />
=== Guilty Plea ===


Pavlo resigned from MCI immediately, hoping the company would write off the $6 million as bad debt to avoid adverse publicity.<ref name="abc-nightline" /> However, MCI reported the fraud to the FBI, which launched an investigation. When the scheme was revealed to MCI's banks, lawsuits followed—banks sued MCI for overstating assets, and factor companies sued for breach of contract, fraud, and conspiracy.<ref name="global-treasurer" />
Rather than go to trial, Pavlo chose to plead guilty to wire fraud, money laundering, and obstruction of justice. By accepting responsibility for his crimes, he received some consideration under federal sentencing guidelines. His cooperation also allowed prosecutors to pursue other individuals involved in the scheme. The guilty plea represented Pavlo's acknowledgment of criminal wrongdoing and his willingness to accept the consequences of his actions.<ref name="abc-pavlo" />


Pavlo retreated from the world as the investigation progressed, becoming paranoid about arrest and surveillance. Three years after the fraud was discovered, in October 2000, he turned himself in to federal investigators and cooperated fully with the government's investigation.<ref name="global-treasurer" />
Pavlo was sentenced to 41 months—three years and five months—in federal prison. He was also ordered to pay restitution, with payments continuing from any subsequent earnings for 27 years after his release. This restitution obligation represented a long-term financial consequence of his crimes that would follow him throughout his post-prison career, ensuring that a portion of any income he earned would be directed toward repaying MCI for the losses caused by his fraud.


== Federal Prosecution and Sentencing ==
=== Reporting to Prison ===


In January 2001, Pavlo pleaded guilty in federal court to wire fraud, money laundering, and obstruction of justice, and agreed to cooperate with the federal investigation.<ref name="winthrop-pavlo" />
In March 2001, Pavlo reported to Federal Prison Camp Edgefield in South Carolina to begin serving his sentence. Prison camps are minimum-security facilities that house non-violent offenders and lack the fences and guard towers of higher-security facilities. Pavlo's assignment to a camp reflected his status as a non-violent, white-collar offender who posed no threat of violence or escape risk.<ref name="mondaq-pavlo" />
 
Pavlo was sentenced to 41 months in federal prison, with the sentence later reduced due to his cooperation.<ref name="icsa-pavlo" /> He was also sentenced to 27 years of restitution payments from any subsequent earnings to repay the funds stolen from MCI.<ref name="abc-nightline" />
 
Harold Mann, Pavlo's partner in the fraud, was convicted and sentenced to four years in federal prison.<ref name="icsa-pavlo" />


== Prison Experience ==
== Prison Experience ==


Pavlo reported to federal prison in March 2001 to begin serving his sentence.<ref name="icsa-pavlo" /> He served his time at Federal Prison Camps in Jesup, Georgia and Edgefield, South Carolina, both minimum-security facilities.<ref name="melmagazine-prison">MEL Magazine, "Just How White Is 'White-Collar Prison,' and What Does It Really Take to Land Yourself There?," February 20, 2019, https://melmagazine.com/en-us/story/just-how-white-is-white-collar-prison-and-what-does-it-really-take-to-land-yourself-there.</ref>
Pavlo served approximately two years at FPC Edgefield before his release. The prison camp experience, while significantly less harsh than higher-security facilities, still represented a dramatic change from his previous life as a successful corporate executive. He lost his career, his marriage when his wife filed for divorce during his incarceration, and his financial security. The time in prison exposed him to the federal corrections system and to other inmates serving sentences for various crimes, providing him with insights into the criminal justice system that would later inform his work as a consultant and educator.<ref name="deseret-pavlo" />
 
Pavlo's security classification was "very low—under five points," driven primarily by his age (under 40), lack of prior criminal history, and the non-violent nature of his offense.<ref name="melmagazine-prison" /> This designation made him eligible for camp placement rather than higher-security facilities.
 
=== Conditions and Demographics ===
 
Pavlo has described his prison experience as "the equivalent of living inside the Department of Motor Vehicles," characterized by "eye-glazing boredom" and "an inefficient regimen that wears a person down."<ref name="melmagazine-prison" /> He described daily life as "made up of waiting in lines for everything: Food, counts, medical, counseling."<ref name="melmagazine-prison" />
 
Regarding the demographic composition of the facilities where he served, Pavlo has stated that of the approximately 500 inmates at the Edgefield camp, perhaps 50 were white-collar offenders, and the white-collar population "was predominantly white." However, he noted that the majority of the overall prison population was Black and Hispanic, with most incarcerated for drug-related crimes.<ref name="melmagazine-prison" />
 
=== Personal Impact ===


Pavlo has stated that "the most difficult thing about prison was the mental stress of being separated from family and friends."<ref name="melmagazine-prison" /> He has spoken about the particular pain of having his two children visit him in prison: "It's standing up in front of them, in front of a room during a count time, and giving your name and your number... to be identified as an inmate in front of your children. It's terrible."<ref name="abc-nightline" />
The experience at Edgefield, while less severe than incarceration in higher-security facilities, nonetheless involved loss of freedom, separation from family, and the stigma of being a convicted felon. Upon release, Pavlo emerged with few resources and faced the challenge of rebuilding his life with a felony record. He returned to live with his parents in West Virginia while attempting to reconstruct his career and personal life. His restitution obligation meant that any future earnings would be partially diverted to pay back what he had stolen, creating an ongoing financial burden that would last for decades.
 
Pavlo was released from federal prison in 2003 after serving approximately two years.<ref name="amazon-book" />


== Post-Release Career ==
== Post-Release Career ==


After his release, Pavlo returned to live with his parents, having lost his home, family, and financial security as a result of his conviction. He began searching for employment but found his resume no longer opened doors.<ref name="abc-nightline" />
=== "Stolen Without a Gun" ===
 
Toward the end of one unsuccessful job interview, the interviewer told Pavlo he did not get the position but asked if he would return the following week to speak to the company's staff about white-collar crime.<ref name="abc-nightline" /> This request launched Pavlo's second career as a speaker and consultant.
 
=== Speaking and Consulting ===
 
Pavlo developed a practice as a nationally recognized speaker on white-collar crime, business ethics, and the federal criminal justice system. Over more than 14 years, he has presented at top-ranked business schools, accounting firms, law enforcement agencies, and professional societies.<ref name="linkedin-pavlo" />
 
His clients and audiences have included:
* The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
* U.S. Attorneys' Offices
* Big Four accounting firms
* Fortune 500 corporations (including frequent presentations at Walmart's training facility)
* Major law schools
* Professional associations<ref name="linkedin-pavlo" />
 
Pavlo has appeared on CNBC's "American Greed" for his coverage of the Sky Capital trial and has been featured in documentary films including "White Collar Convicts: Life On The Inside" and "(Dis)Honesty."<ref name="winthrop-pavlo" />
 
His work has been covered by Forbes, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, the NBC Today Show, National Public Radio, Fox Business, and ABC Nightline.<ref name="linkedin-pavlo" />
 
=== Prison Consulting: Prisonology ===
 
Pavlo co-founded Prisonology LLC, an expert testimony, consulting, and training firm specializing in Federal Bureau of Prisons policies and procedures.<ref name="linkedin-pavlo" /> The firm provides services to attorneys and defendants in federal criminal matters, guiding them from the Presentence Investigation through Supervised Release.
 
According to Pavlo, Prisonology is "the only complete source of information on U.S. Probation and the Federal Bureau Of Prisons that is aligned with the goals of the law."<ref name="prisonology-about">Prisonology, "About," accessed November 2025, https://www.prisonology.com/about.</ref>
 
Prisonology's services include:
* Expert testimony in federal court proceedings
* Training for legal professionals on BOP policies
* Consulting on facility designation, medical care, and program eligibility
* Guidance on sentence computation and time credits<ref name="prisonology-about" />
 
The firm includes staff with decades of experience in the Bureau of Prisons, including former BOP employees who held positions in case management, the [[Residential_Drug_Abuse_Program_(RDAP)|Residential Drug Abuse Program]] (RDAP), the Designation and Sentence Computation Center (DSCC), and medical services.<ref name="prisonology-about" />
 
=== 500 Pearl Street ===
 
Pavlo established 500 Pearl Street (named after the address of the federal courthouse in Manhattan) as a speaker bureau and crisis management firm.<ref name="500pearl-services">500 Pearl Street, "Services," accessed November 2025, https://500pearlstreet.com/services/.</ref>
 
The firm brings together journalists, former law enforcement agents, forensic accountants, attorneys, and individuals involved in white-collar crimes to create training events. It also provides media relations and narrative control services for clients facing complex litigation, leveraging Pavlo's contacts with reporters and news production executives.<ref name="500pearl-services" />
 
=== Writing and Journalism ===
 
Pavlo is a contributor to Forbes.com, where he writes on white-collar crime and criminal justice issues.<ref name="linkedin-pavlo" /> He also contributes to the New York University School of Law's Program on Corporate Compliance and Enforcement (PCCE).<ref name="linkedin-pavlo" />
 
In 2007, Pavlo co-authored "Stolen Without A Gun: Confessions from inside history's biggest accounting fraud—the collapse of MCI WorldCom" with Neil Weinberg, then a senior editor at Forbes (now a reporter at Bloomberg).<ref name="amazon-book" /> The book chronicles Pavlo's experience at MCI, his criminal conduct, and his subsequent incarceration.
 
Pavlo and Maureen Baird (a former BOP warden) write a column for the American Bar Association's Criminal Justice magazine.<ref name="prisonology-about" />
 
In 2014, Pavlo completed the Journalist Law School Fellow program at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, a four-day intensive seminar on the legal system for journalists.<ref name="linkedin-pavlo" />
 
=== Academic Appointments ===
 
Pavlo serves as an adjunct professor at Endicott College, where he teaches MBA-level Ethics and Corporate Responsibility courses featuring lectures, live guest interviews, and case study analysis.<ref name="linkedin-pavlo" />
 
== Public Statements ==
 
Pavlo has been candid about his crimes while emphasizing the conditions that contributed to his conduct. He has stated: "I'm not a bad person. The reason I enjoy speaking to groups and telling my story is because I want to protect the person, those people in the workplace, from temptation. Many of us know someone who fell short."<ref name="deseret-pavlo">Deseret News, "Former MCI manager recalls life of crime," January 10, 2008, https://www.deseret.com/2008/1/10/20063556/former-mci-manager-recalls-life-of-crime/.</ref>
 
On the universality of white-collar crime risk, Pavlo has stated: "All of us are capable of such a crime. Nobody is immune. I did it, and you can do it."<ref name="abc-nightline" />
 
Regarding his response to criticism that he continues to profit from his criminal past, Pavlo has stated: "Before I was a criminal or committed a criminal act, I was someone. I was someone who was on the fast track and did a lot of things right in my life. I've paid a significant price for what I've done, and I tell people that, and I educate people with a cautionary tale about what's going on out there. I'm trying to make a difference, and it's a chance for me to move on with my life."<ref name="abc-nightline" />
 
Pavlo has spoken about his rationalization at the time of the fraud: "I put the company and the clients in the same bucket. I felt like I was getting one up on people who were trying to one up me... Initially, I saw this as a victimless crime. I didn't see victims like the shareholders or my family."<ref name="deseret-pavlo" />
 
On the personal consequences, Pavlo has stated: "Your family can accept the fact that you have a terminal disease easier than the news that you're going to prison."<ref name="deseret-pavlo" />
 
Despite the difficulties, Pavlo has expressed that his experience ultimately improved him: "I'm a better person. It definitely has changed my perspectives about how I view people, how I judge people. I don't judge people. I am a better person as a result of that, more forgiving and more patient."<ref name="today-pavlo">TODAY Show, "White-collar ex-con: Jail looms for mortgage execs," October 8, 2008, https://www.today.com/news/white-collar-ex-con-jail-looms-mortgage-execs-1C9014409.</ref>
 
== Terminology ==
 
* '''Wire Fraud''': A federal crime (18 U.S.C. § 1343) involving any scheme to defraud by means of interstate wire communications, including telephone, email, or electronic funds transfers, carrying penalties of up to 20 years in prison.
 
* '''Money Laundering''': Federal crimes (18 U.S.C. §§ 1956, 1957) involving financial transactions designed to conceal the source, ownership, or destination of illegally obtained funds.


* '''Obstruction of Justice''': Federal crimes involving interference with the administration of justice, including destruction of evidence, witness tampering, or misleading investigators.
In 2007, Pavlo partnered with Forbes journalist Neil Weinberg to write "Stolen Without a Gun," a book detailing his crimes, his prosecution, his prison experience, and his reflections on how he came to be a white-collar criminal. The book provided an inside account of corporate fraud that resonated with readers interested in understanding the psychology of white-collar crime from the perspective of someone who had committed it. The collaboration with Weinberg, an experienced business journalist, lent credibility to the project and helped ensure that the book reached a professional audience interested in fraud prevention.<ref name="journalofaccountancy" />


* '''Lapping Scheme''': A form of accounting fraud where payments from one customer are applied to another customer's account to conceal shortages or theft, requiring continuous manipulation to prevent detection.
The book served multiple purposes: it told Pavlo's story with candor and detail, provided insights useful for fraud prevention professionals and corporate compliance officers, and established his credentials as an expert on white-collar crime who could speak from direct experience. The publication launched his second career as a speaker and educator on fraud and ethics, transforming him from convicted criminal to recognized authority on preventing the kinds of crimes he had committed. The book received positive reviews in professional publications including the Journal of Accountancy, which praised its insights into the rationalization processes that enable white-collar crime.


* '''Accounts Receivable''': Money owed to a company by its customers for goods or services delivered on credit.
=== Speaking and Teaching ===


* '''Federal Prison Camp (FPC)''': The lowest security level in the Federal Bureau of Prisons system, typically featuring dormitory housing, limited or no perimeter fencing, and a low staff-to-inmate ratio, housing inmates with minimal security needs.
Since his release, Pavlo has spoken at more than 100 universities, accounting firms, corporations, and professional conferences across the United States and internationally. His presentations provide insight into how fraud happens from the perspective of someone who committed it—a perspective that academic experts and prosecutors cannot offer from their own experience. He explains the rationalization processes that allow otherwise law-abiding individuals to convince themselves that criminal conduct is acceptable, drawing on his own thought processes during his time at MCI to illustrate how cognitive distortions enable fraud.<ref name="winthrop-pavlo" />


* '''Security Points''': A scoring system used by the BOP to determine appropriate security designation for inmates, based on factors including offense severity, criminal history, age, education, and history of violence.
Pavlo has also worked with law enforcement agencies, including providing training to FBI agents on white-collar crime investigation. His inside knowledge of how corporate fraud operates has proven valuable for investigators seeking to understand the tactics and psychology of white-collar criminals. He has lectured at business schools and accounting programs, helping future business leaders understand the ethical challenges they may face and the importance of maintaining strong ethical boundaries even in corporate cultures that tolerate questionable practices. His willingness to discuss his crimes frankly, without minimizing his responsibility, has made him an effective educator whose cautionary tale resonates with audiences.


* '''Carrier Finance''': A division within a telecommunications company responsible for billing and collecting receivables from other carriers and large resellers who purchase services in bulk.
=== Writing and Commentary ===


* '''Presentence Investigation (PSI)''': A report prepared by a U.S. Probation Officer providing the sentencing judge with information about the defendant's background, criminal history, and offense circumstances.
Pavlo has continued to write extensively about white-collar crime, contributing regular articles to Forbes on topics including fraud, corporate ethics, prison reform, and criminal justice policy. His commentary provides analysis of high-profile fraud cases and discusses broader issues in corporate governance, ethics, and fraud prevention. He brings a unique perspective as someone who has both committed and been punished for corporate fraud, allowing him to analyze cases from multiple angles—the offender's psychology, the organizational vulnerabilities that enable fraud, and the consequences of prosecution and incarceration.<ref name="ualr-pavlo" />


* '''Supervised Release''': A period of supervision following release from federal prison, similar to parole, during which the released individual must comply with conditions set by the court.
His Forbes articles have covered a wide range of criminal justice topics beyond white-collar crime, including profiles of individuals who have rebuilt their lives after incarceration, analysis of prison conditions and reform efforts, and discussions of sentencing policy. This broader focus on criminal justice issues reflects his evolution from white-collar crime specialist to general criminal justice commentator. His work has helped bring attention to issues including prison conditions, reentry challenges for former inmates, and the long-term consequences of felony convictions.


* '''RDAP''': The Residential Drug Abuse Program, a 500-hour treatment program offered by the Bureau of Prisons that can result in up to one year off an inmate's sentence upon successful completion.
=== Consulting and Fraud Prevention Work ===


* '''DSCC''': The Designation and Sentence Computation Center, the BOP office responsible for determining initial facility placement and calculating sentences for all federal inmates.
Beyond speaking and writing, Pavlo has developed a consulting practice focused on fraud prevention, corporate ethics, and compliance program development. He advises organizations on how to identify vulnerabilities in their financial controls and corporate cultures that could enable fraud. His consulting work draws on his intimate knowledge of how fraud schemes are conceived and executed within corporate environments, allowing him to identify risks that might not be apparent to consultants without direct experience committing fraud.


== See also ==
Pavlo's consulting approach emphasizes the importance of corporate culture in preventing fraud. He argues that organizations with cultures that tolerate small ethical compromises create conditions where larger frauds can develop, and that effective fraud prevention requires not just strong controls but also ethical leadership and accountability at all levels. His work has influenced how some organizations approach ethics training and compliance, shifting focus from rule-based approaches to culture-based prevention that addresses the rationalization processes that enable white-collar crime.


* [[Prison_Consultants|Prison Consultants]]
== Public Statements and Positions ==


== References ==
Pavlo has been consistently candid about his crimes and his culpability in public statements throughout his post-prison career. Rather than minimizing his conduct or blaming others for his choices, he accepts full responsibility for his actions and uses his experience as a cautionary tale. This acceptance of responsibility has been central to his credibility as a speaker and educator, distinguishing him from some former offenders who attempt to rehabilitate their images by deflecting blame or portraying themselves as victims.


<references />
His presentations emphasize the gradual nature of the slide into criminal conduct. Pavlo did not wake up one day and decide to become a criminal; rather, he made a series of small compromises that eventually led him across the line into serious crime. He describes how each step seemed justifiable at the time, how he convinced himself that his actions were acceptable, and how the progression from questionable accounting practices to outright theft occurred incrementally rather than through a single decision. He argues that organizations need to understand this psychology to prevent fraud effectively, recognizing


[[Category:High-Profile_Federal_Offenders]]
== Nightmare Success Guides ==
[[Category:Prison_Consultants]]
* [https://nightmaresuccess.com/guides/white-collar-cases-common-triggers-and-early-mistakes/ White-Collar Cases: Common Triggers and Early Mistakes] — Common escalation patterns and the early-stage discipline that limits damage.
* [https://nightmaresuccess.com/guides/how-federal-sentencing-works-step-by-step/ How Federal Sentencing Actually Works] — Practical breakdown from investigation through sentencing, grounded in real guest stories.

Latest revision as of 19:51, 2 March 2026

Walter "Walt" Pavlo Jr.
Born: 1965
West Virginia
Charges: Wire fraud, Money laundering, Obstruction of justice
Sentence: 41 months (served approximately 2 years)
Facility: Federal Prison Camp, Edgefield
Status: Released

Walter "Walt" Pavlo Jr. (born 1965) is an American author, speaker, and white-collar crime expert who served approximately two years in federal prison after pleading guilty to wire fraud, money laundering, and obstruction of justice for his role in a $6 million embezzlement scheme while working as a senior manager at MCI Communications in the mid-1990s.[1] Pavlo, who had been responsible for billing and collection of nearly $1 billion in monthly revenue at MCI, devised a scheme with a colleague to siphon money from delinquent customer accounts into offshore accounts in the Cayman Islands. After his crimes were discovered and he pleaded guilty in 2001, Pavlo served his sentence at Federal Prison Camp Edgefield in South Carolina. Since his release, he has become one of the most prominent voices on white-collar crime, authoring the book "Stolen Without a Gun" with Forbes journalist Neil Weinberg in 2007, teaching at business schools, contributing regularly to Forbes on criminal justice topics, and speaking to corporate audiences, law enforcement, and professional organizations about fraud, ethics, and the psychology of white-collar criminals.[2][3]

Early Life and Education

Walt Pavlo Jr. was born in 1965 in West Virginia, where he was raised before pursuing higher education and a career in corporate finance. Details about his early education and formative years shaped his eventual path to MCI Communications, where he would rise to a position of significant financial responsibility before his criminal conduct. His background in finance and accounting provided the technical skills that would later enable both his corporate success and his ability to execute a sophisticated fraud scheme.

Summary

Walt Pavlo's story represents a classic case study in how otherwise law-abiding corporate employees can rationalize increasingly serious criminal conduct. He did not set out to become a white-collar criminal; rather, he progressively descended into fraud through a series of rationalizations that allowed him to convince himself that his actions were justified or at least excusable. His subsequent career as a fraud educator has given him a platform to explain the psychology of white-collar crime from the inside, helping organizations understand how to prevent employees from following the same path.[4]

Pavlo's fraud at MCI began with what he later characterized as a corrupt corporate culture that encouraged employees to manipulate financial results. He learned techniques for hiding bad debts and making the company's financial performance appear better than it actually was. When he began diverting money to his own accounts, he rationalized the theft by telling himself that MCI was corrupt anyway, that he was underpaid for his work, and that the company could afford the losses. These rationalizations allowed him to cross ethical and legal lines that he would have considered unthinkable at the start of his career, illustrating the incremental nature of white-collar crime and the power of self-justification in enabling criminal behavior.[5]

Since his release from prison, Pavlo has built a career helping others understand how white-collar crime happens and how organizations can prevent it. He has spoken at more than 100 universities, corporate events, and professional conferences, and has consulted with law enforcement agencies including the FBI. His willingness to discuss his crimes frankly and to explain the thought processes that led him to steal has made him a valuable resource for fraud prevention education.[6]

Career at MCI Communications

Early Career and Advancement

In 1992, Walt Pavlo Jr. joined MCI Communications, which would later become part of WorldCom and eventually the second-largest telecommunications company in the United States. Pavlo quickly impressed his supervisors with his financial acumen and work ethic, earning rapid promotions within the organization. He was promoted to become second in command of the carrier finance division, where he was responsible for billing and collection of nearly $1 billion in monthly revenue. This position placed him in control of substantial financial flows and gave him authority over how customer accounts were managed and recorded.[2]

MCI's carrier finance division dealt with wholesale customers—other telecommunications companies that purchased network capacity from MCI. Managing accounts receivable in this division involved substantial amounts of money and required judgment about how to handle delinquent accounts. Pavlo's position gave him both the opportunity and the authority to manipulate how customer debts were recorded and managed. The division's operations involved complex inter-carrier settlements and provided multiple opportunities for financial manipulation by someone with inside knowledge of the systems and processes.

Corporate Culture and Rationalization

According to Pavlo's own accounts in subsequent interviews and in his book, the corporate culture at MCI in the mid-1990s tolerated and even encouraged manipulation of financial results. He was taught techniques for hiding bad debts from customers who were unlikely to pay, allowing the company to report better financial performance than reality warranted. This culture of manipulation, Pavlo has argued, set the stage for his own criminal conduct by normalizing dishonesty and creating an environment where ethical boundaries became increasingly blurred.[1]

Pavlo's rationalization process illustrates how white-collar criminals often drift into crime rather than making a conscious decision to become criminals. He convinced himself that the manipulations he was performing were acceptable because everyone else was doing them, that the company was treating him unfairly by not paying him what he deserved, and that MCI was so large and profitable that his theft would not really harm anyone. These cognitive distortions are typical of white-collar offenders who maintain a law-abiding self-image while engaging in serious criminal conduct. The gradual escalation from questionable accounting practices to outright theft demonstrates how corporate environments that tolerate small ethical compromises can enable larger frauds.

The Fraud Scheme

Diverting Customer Payments

In 1996, Pavlo and a colleague devised a scheme to profit from their positions at MCI. They identified customers with substantial overdue balances who were unlikely to pay their full debts and offered to "resolve" these debts in exchange for payments to accounts controlled by Pavlo and his colleague rather than to MCI. The scheme essentially involved extorting payments from delinquent customers in exchange for making their debts disappear from MCI's records. Customers who agreed to participate paid a portion of what they owed, benefiting from debt reduction, while Pavlo and his accomplice pocketed the payments instead of remitting them to MCI.[4]

The payments were routed to accounts in the Cayman Islands, where they could be concealed from U.S. authorities and from MCI's internal auditors. Over approximately six months, Pavlo and his colleague diverted approximately $6 million from MCI customers using this scheme. The offshore accounts were structured to obscure the true ownership and to make tracing the funds difficult for investigators. This sophisticated use of offshore banking demonstrated a level of planning and premeditation that distinguished Pavlo's conduct from impulsive theft.

Discovery and Investigation

The scheme was eventually discovered through internal controls when accounts that were written off raised questions after customers subsequently claimed they had made payments. MCI's internal audit team began investigating the discrepancies, and the investigation revealed Pavlo's role in the fraud. The discovery led to a federal investigation involving multiple agencies examining the wire fraud, money laundering, and obstruction of justice aspects of the case.[2]

Pavlo's arrest and prosecution occurred during a period of heightened scrutiny of corporate fraud following high-profile scandals in the telecommunications and technology sectors. His case was one of many that exposed problems in corporate finance and internal controls during the late 1990s and early 2000s. MCI itself would later be acquired by WorldCom, which collapsed in 2002 in one of the largest accounting frauds in American history, involving $11 billion in misstatements. While Pavlo's fraud was unrelated to WorldCom's later accounting scandal, both cases highlighted systemic problems in the telecommunications industry's financial practices during this period.

Indictment, Prosecution, and Sentencing

Guilty Plea

Rather than go to trial, Pavlo chose to plead guilty to wire fraud, money laundering, and obstruction of justice. By accepting responsibility for his crimes, he received some consideration under federal sentencing guidelines. His cooperation also allowed prosecutors to pursue other individuals involved in the scheme. The guilty plea represented Pavlo's acknowledgment of criminal wrongdoing and his willingness to accept the consequences of his actions.[1]

Pavlo was sentenced to 41 months—three years and five months—in federal prison. He was also ordered to pay restitution, with payments continuing from any subsequent earnings for 27 years after his release. This restitution obligation represented a long-term financial consequence of his crimes that would follow him throughout his post-prison career, ensuring that a portion of any income he earned would be directed toward repaying MCI for the losses caused by his fraud.

Reporting to Prison

In March 2001, Pavlo reported to Federal Prison Camp Edgefield in South Carolina to begin serving his sentence. Prison camps are minimum-security facilities that house non-violent offenders and lack the fences and guard towers of higher-security facilities. Pavlo's assignment to a camp reflected his status as a non-violent, white-collar offender who posed no threat of violence or escape risk.[2]

Prison Experience

Pavlo served approximately two years at FPC Edgefield before his release. The prison camp experience, while significantly less harsh than higher-security facilities, still represented a dramatic change from his previous life as a successful corporate executive. He lost his career, his marriage when his wife filed for divorce during his incarceration, and his financial security. The time in prison exposed him to the federal corrections system and to other inmates serving sentences for various crimes, providing him with insights into the criminal justice system that would later inform his work as a consultant and educator.[4]

The experience at Edgefield, while less severe than incarceration in higher-security facilities, nonetheless involved loss of freedom, separation from family, and the stigma of being a convicted felon. Upon release, Pavlo emerged with few resources and faced the challenge of rebuilding his life with a felony record. He returned to live with his parents in West Virginia while attempting to reconstruct his career and personal life. His restitution obligation meant that any future earnings would be partially diverted to pay back what he had stolen, creating an ongoing financial burden that would last for decades.

Post-Release Career

"Stolen Without a Gun"

In 2007, Pavlo partnered with Forbes journalist Neil Weinberg to write "Stolen Without a Gun," a book detailing his crimes, his prosecution, his prison experience, and his reflections on how he came to be a white-collar criminal. The book provided an inside account of corporate fraud that resonated with readers interested in understanding the psychology of white-collar crime from the perspective of someone who had committed it. The collaboration with Weinberg, an experienced business journalist, lent credibility to the project and helped ensure that the book reached a professional audience interested in fraud prevention.[3]

The book served multiple purposes: it told Pavlo's story with candor and detail, provided insights useful for fraud prevention professionals and corporate compliance officers, and established his credentials as an expert on white-collar crime who could speak from direct experience. The publication launched his second career as a speaker and educator on fraud and ethics, transforming him from convicted criminal to recognized authority on preventing the kinds of crimes he had committed. The book received positive reviews in professional publications including the Journal of Accountancy, which praised its insights into the rationalization processes that enable white-collar crime.

Speaking and Teaching

Since his release, Pavlo has spoken at more than 100 universities, accounting firms, corporations, and professional conferences across the United States and internationally. His presentations provide insight into how fraud happens from the perspective of someone who committed it—a perspective that academic experts and prosecutors cannot offer from their own experience. He explains the rationalization processes that allow otherwise law-abiding individuals to convince themselves that criminal conduct is acceptable, drawing on his own thought processes during his time at MCI to illustrate how cognitive distortions enable fraud.[5]

Pavlo has also worked with law enforcement agencies, including providing training to FBI agents on white-collar crime investigation. His inside knowledge of how corporate fraud operates has proven valuable for investigators seeking to understand the tactics and psychology of white-collar criminals. He has lectured at business schools and accounting programs, helping future business leaders understand the ethical challenges they may face and the importance of maintaining strong ethical boundaries even in corporate cultures that tolerate questionable practices. His willingness to discuss his crimes frankly, without minimizing his responsibility, has made him an effective educator whose cautionary tale resonates with audiences.

Writing and Commentary

Pavlo has continued to write extensively about white-collar crime, contributing regular articles to Forbes on topics including fraud, corporate ethics, prison reform, and criminal justice policy. His commentary provides analysis of high-profile fraud cases and discusses broader issues in corporate governance, ethics, and fraud prevention. He brings a unique perspective as someone who has both committed and been punished for corporate fraud, allowing him to analyze cases from multiple angles—the offender's psychology, the organizational vulnerabilities that enable fraud, and the consequences of prosecution and incarceration.[6]

His Forbes articles have covered a wide range of criminal justice topics beyond white-collar crime, including profiles of individuals who have rebuilt their lives after incarceration, analysis of prison conditions and reform efforts, and discussions of sentencing policy. This broader focus on criminal justice issues reflects his evolution from white-collar crime specialist to general criminal justice commentator. His work has helped bring attention to issues including prison conditions, reentry challenges for former inmates, and the long-term consequences of felony convictions.

Consulting and Fraud Prevention Work

Beyond speaking and writing, Pavlo has developed a consulting practice focused on fraud prevention, corporate ethics, and compliance program development. He advises organizations on how to identify vulnerabilities in their financial controls and corporate cultures that could enable fraud. His consulting work draws on his intimate knowledge of how fraud schemes are conceived and executed within corporate environments, allowing him to identify risks that might not be apparent to consultants without direct experience committing fraud.

Pavlo's consulting approach emphasizes the importance of corporate culture in preventing fraud. He argues that organizations with cultures that tolerate small ethical compromises create conditions where larger frauds can develop, and that effective fraud prevention requires not just strong controls but also ethical leadership and accountability at all levels. His work has influenced how some organizations approach ethics training and compliance, shifting focus from rule-based approaches to culture-based prevention that addresses the rationalization processes that enable white-collar crime.

Public Statements and Positions

Pavlo has been consistently candid about his crimes and his culpability in public statements throughout his post-prison career. Rather than minimizing his conduct or blaming others for his choices, he accepts full responsibility for his actions and uses his experience as a cautionary tale. This acceptance of responsibility has been central to his credibility as a speaker and educator, distinguishing him from some former offenders who attempt to rehabilitate their images by deflecting blame or portraying themselves as victims.

His presentations emphasize the gradual nature of the slide into criminal conduct. Pavlo did not wake up one day and decide to become a criminal; rather, he made a series of small compromises that eventually led him across the line into serious crime. He describes how each step seemed justifiable at the time, how he convinced himself that his actions were acceptable, and how the progression from questionable accounting practices to outright theft occurred incrementally rather than through a single decision. He argues that organizations need to understand this psychology to prevent fraud effectively, recognizing

Nightmare Success Guides

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 ABC News, "Walt Pavlo: The Visiting Fellow of Fraud," August 2006, https://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/Business/story?id=1557957.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Mondaq, "Walt Pavlo: Daylight Fraud," February 2018, https://www.mondaq.com/uk/white-collar-crime-anti-corruption-fraud/646062/walt-pavlo-daylight-fraud.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Journal of Accountancy, "Stolen Without a Gun," December 2007, https://www.journalofaccountancy.com/issues/2007/dec/stolenwithoutagun/.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Deseret News, "Former MCI manager recalls life of crime," January 10, 2008, https://www.deseret.com/2008/1/10/20063556/former-mci-manager-recalls-life-of-crime/.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Winthrop University, "Whitton Executive Series Features Fraud Expert Walt Pavlo Jr.," https://www.winthrop.edu/news-events/whitton-executive-series-features-fraud-expert-walt-pavlo.aspx.
  6. 6.0 6.1 University of Arkansas at Little Rock School of Business, "Former MCI WorldCom Exec Convicted of Fraud Presents to 100," October 26, 2009, https://ualr.edu/business/2009/10/26/worldcom/.