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'''Tara Lenich''' is an American criminal justice advocate, prison consultant, and mitigation specialist who founded [[Liberty Advisors LLC]]. With a unique perspective gained from over a decade as a prosecutor in New York and subsequent personal experience as a defendant and federal inmate, Lenich provides holistic support to clients navigating the criminal legal system.
{{Infobox Person
|name = Tara Lenich
|charges = Conspiracy to commit illegal wiretapping (intentional interception of communications)
|conviction_date = April 4, 2017 (guilty plea)
|sentence = One year and one day in federal prison
|sentencing_date = February 2, 2018
|judge = Hon. William F. Kuntz II
|case_number = 1:16-cr-00696 (E.D.N.Y.)
|status = Released
|occupation = Former assistant district attorney (disbarred)
|known_for = Forging judges' signatures to run illegal wiretaps on a fellow prosecutor and an NYPD detective
}}


== Background and Education ==
'''Tara Lenich''' is a former assistant district attorney in the Kings County (Brooklyn) District Attorney's Office who was convicted in federal court for running an illegal wiretapping scheme. Lenich forged the signatures of state judges on fabricated eavesdropping orders. She used those orders to intercept the calls and text messages of two people: a fellow Brooklyn prosecutor and a New York City Police Department detective with whom she had been personally involved.<ref name="doj-sentence">{{cite web |title=Former Brooklyn Assistant District Attorney Sentenced for Illegal Wiretapping Scheme |url=https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/former-brooklyn-assistant-district-attorney-sentenced-illegal-wiretapping-scheme |publisher=U.S. Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney's Office, Eastern District of New York |date=2018-02-02 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref><ref name="patch">{{cite news |title=Brooklyn Prosecutor Jailed For Illegally Wiretapping Lovers |url=https://patch.com/new-york/brooklyn/brooklyn-prosecutor-jailed-illegally-wiretapping-lovers |work=Patch |date=2018-02-02 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


Lenich grew up in New England and pursued her undergraduate education at [[Colby College]]. She later earned her law degree from [[Emory University School of Law]], which provided the foundation for her extensive career in the criminal justice system.
Lenich had worked at the Brooklyn District Attorney's Office since 2005. By the time of her arrest she was deputy chief of the office's special investigations unit, a post that gave her authority over wiretap applications. She used that authority to bypass the courts entirely. The fabricated orders ran for more than a year, from June 2015 until her arrest in November 2016.<ref name="doj-sentence" /><ref name="cbs">{{cite news |title=Ex-prosecutor admits wiretapping cop "love interest" |url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/ex-prosecutor-admits-wiretapping-cop-love-interest/ |work=CBS News |date=2017-04-04 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


== Legal Career ==
She pleaded guilty in the Eastern District of New York on April 4, 2017. On February 2, 2018, U.S. District Judge William F. Kuntz II sentenced her to one year and one day in federal prison. She was disbarred as a result of the conviction.<ref name="doj-sentence" /><ref name="brooklyneagle-sentence">{{cite news |title=Ex-Brooklyn prosecutor gets jail time for wiretapping love interest |url=https://brooklyneagle.com/articles/2018/02/02/ex-brooklyn-prosecutor-gets-jail-time-for-wiretapping-love-interest/ |work=Brooklyn Daily Eagle |date=2018-02-02 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


=== Prosecution Experience ===
== Background ==


Following law school, Lenich began her career as a prosecutor in New York, where she served for over a decade. During this time, she gained comprehensive experience in all aspects of the criminal justice system from the prosecution side, developing expertise in criminal law procedures, case preparation, and courtroom advocacy.
Lenich joined the Kings County District Attorney's Office in 2005. Over the next decade she rose through the office and was assigned to its special investigations work. At the time of the conduct that led to her prosecution she held the title of deputy chief of special investigations.<ref name="doj-sentence" /><ref name="waterfront">{{cite web |title=Former prosecutor forges warrants to wiretap romance of colleague prosecutor and police detective, sentenced to jail |url=https://waterfrontintelligence.com/blog/former-prosecutor-forges-warrants/ |publisher=Waterfront Intelligence |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


=== Personal Experience with the System ===
The role carried real power over surveillance. Special investigations handled wiretap requests, and Lenich had oversight of the office's wire room operations. A lawful wiretap in New York requires a judge to sign an eavesdropping order. Lenich's position meant she knew how those orders were drafted, what they looked like, and how cellular carriers processed them. That knowledge became the mechanism of the offense.<ref name="doj-sentence" /><ref name="washtimes">{{cite news |title=Ex-prosecutor sentenced for illegal spying in love triangle |url=https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/feb/2/ex-prosecutor-sentenced-to-illegal-spying-in-love-/ |work=The Washington Times |date=2018-02-02 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


Lenich's perspective on the criminal justice system underwent a profound transformation when she found herself on the other side of the legal process as a defendant in both criminal and civil cases. This experience provided her with firsthand insight into the challenges faced by individuals and families navigating the complex criminal legal system.
== The Wiretapping Scheme ==


During this period, Lenich hired prison consultants herself, giving her direct experience with the services she now provides to others. She subsequently served 10 months at [[Federal Correctional Institution, Danbury]] (FCI Danbury), a federal prison facility in Connecticut that houses female inmates.
The surveillance targeted two people. One was a fellow assistant district attorney in the Brooklyn office. The other was a New York City Police Department detective. Lenich had been personally involved with the detective. News reporting identified the prosecutor as Stephanie Rosenfeld and the detective as Jarrett Lemieux; federal filings referred to the targets without naming them.<ref name="dailybeast">{{cite news |title=Lovesick Prosecutor Who Wiretapped Her Crush Also Snooped on 700 Other People: Lawsuit |url=https://www.thedailybeast.com/lovesick-prosecutor-who-wiretapped-her-love-interest-also-snooped-on-700-other-people-lawsuit/ |work=The Daily Beast |date=2018-09-13 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref><ref name="waterfront" />


== Liberty Advisors LLC ==
Lenich did not seek a judge's approval. She manufactured it. She took the genuine signatures of state judges from legitimate court documents, cut them out, and taped them onto orders she had drafted herself. The result looked like a signed eavesdropping order. She then submitted the forged orders to cellular providers, which activated the intercepts.<ref name="waterfront" /><ref name="gothamist">{{cite news |title=Brooklyn ADA Pleads Guilty To Wiretapping Fellow ADA & Detective Love Interest |url=https://gothamist.com/news/brooklyn-ada-pleads-guilty-to-wiretapping-fellow-ada-detective-love-interest |work=Gothamist |date=2017-04-04 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


Following her release, Lenich founded '''Liberty Advisors LLC''', a consulting firm dedicated to providing comprehensive support to clients and their families as they navigate the criminal legal system. The company takes a holistic approach, addressing not only the legal aspects of cases but also the emotional and practical challenges faced by defendants and their loved ones.
The forgeries were not isolated. Federal prosecutors said Lenich created and submitted seven forged judicial orders to one cellular provider to intercept communications on a single target phone. Investigators later found copies of roughly twenty forged wiretap orders on her office computer. Each order had a finite duration, so the scheme required repeated renewals to keep the intercepts live across many months.<ref name="doj-charge">{{cite web |title=Former Brooklyn Assistant District Attorney Charged with Illegally Wiretapping Cellular Telephones |url=https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/former-brooklyn-assistant-district-attorney-charged-illegally-wiretapping-cellular |publisher=U.S. Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney's Office, Eastern District of New York |date=2016-11 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref><ref name="patch" />


=== Services ===
The intercepts ran from June 2015 to November 2016. Across that period Lenich listened to phone calls and read text messages from the two phones. The scheme ended when the conduct was discovered and reported within the district attorney's office, which referred the matter to federal authorities.<ref name="doj-sentence" /><ref name="washtimes" />


Liberty Advisors LLC offers a range of services designed to prepare and support clients throughout their involvement with the criminal justice system. These services include:
== Charges and Guilty Plea ==


* Prison consulting and preparation
Lenich was arrested in November 2016. The federal charges were brought in the Eastern District of New York. The case was investigated and prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney's Office for that district.<ref name="doj-charge" /><ref name="cbs" />
* Mitigation specialist services
* Advocacy and support for defendants and families
* Educational seminars and speaking engagements
* Guidance on federal prison procedures and expectations


== Mitigation Specialist Certification ==
On April 4, 2017, Lenich pleaded guilty. She admitted to two counts of illegal interception of communications, a class D felony under federal wiretap law. The plea covered the fabricated orders used against both target phones. Her attorney said she had wanted to accept responsibility and plead guilty at the first opportunity.<ref name="cbs" /><ref name="brooklyneagle-plea">{{cite news |title=Federal judge accepts guilty plea of former Brooklyn ADA in forging judges' signatures |url=https://brooklyneagle.com/articles/2017/04/03/federal-judge-accepts-guilty-plea-of-former-brooklyn-ada-in-forging-judges-signatures/ |work=Brooklyn Daily Eagle |date=2017-04-03 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


Lenich is a certified mitigation specialist, a credential that enables her to work with legal teams to explore and develop mitigation strategies for clients facing criminal charges. Mitigation specialists play a crucial role in criminal defense by investigating and presenting evidence that may reduce sentences or lead to alternative dispositions.
Under the federal sentencing guidelines, the offenses carried an advisory range that topped out near fourteen months. The statute permitted a longer term, but the calculated range placed her exposure low. The plea left the final term to the court.<ref name="cbs" />


Her certification allows her to assist defense attorneys in gathering and presenting biographical, psychological, and social history information that can be crucial in sentencing proceedings. This work often involves extensive research into a client's background, including family history, mental health issues, substance abuse problems, and other factors that may have contributed to their involvement in criminal activity.
== Sentencing ==


== Advocacy and Philosophy ==
U.S. District Judge William F. Kuntz II sentenced Lenich on February 2, 2018. He imposed one year and one day in federal prison. The extra day matters under federal practice: a sentence of more than one year makes an inmate eligible for good-conduct credit, which can shorten actual time served.<ref name="doj-sentence" /><ref name="brooklyneagle-sentence" />


Lenich's approach to prison consulting and advocacy is informed by her unique dual perspective as both a former prosecutor and former inmate. This background allows her to understand the system from multiple angles and provide clients with realistic expectations while maintaining compassionate support.
At sentencing Lenich was 42 years old. The judge framed the case in literary terms, describing a protagonist undone by a single fatal flaw. The conviction ended her legal career. She was disbarred.<ref name="patch" /><ref name="waterfront" />


Her advocacy work emphasizes the human side of the criminal justice system, recognizing that defendants and their families face significant emotional, financial, and social challenges throughout the legal process. Lenich's personal experience with these challenges enables her to provide empathetic guidance and practical advice to clients facing similar situations.
The fallout reached beyond Lenich herself. Because she had handled or touched investigations during her years in special investigations, the district attorney's office reviewed cases she had been involved in. Her conduct also drew civil litigation. A class action filed on behalf of people whose phones or records may have been swept into her surveillance alleged that the scheme reached far more individuals than the two named targets, with one complaint asserting hundreds of affected people. That civil case proceeded separately from the criminal conviction.<ref name="dailybeast" /><ref name="classaction">{{cite web |title=Class Action Looks to Represent 'Hundreds' Allegedly Wrapped Up in Illegal Wiretapping Operation Run by Ex-Brooklyn Prosecutor |url=https://www.classaction.org/news/class-action-looks-to-represent-hundreds-allegedly-wrapped-up-in-illegal-wiretapping-operation-run-by-ex-brooklyn-prosecutor |publisher=ClassAction.org |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


=== Holistic Approach ===
== Frequently Asked Questions ==
 
{{FAQSection/Start}}
Liberty Advisors LLC's holistic approach distinguishes it from traditional legal services by addressing the comprehensive needs of clients and their families. This includes:
{{FAQ|question=What did Tara Lenich do?|answer=Tara Lenich was a Brooklyn assistant district attorney who forged judges' signatures to create fake wiretap orders. She used those orders to illegally intercept the calls and text messages of a fellow prosecutor and a New York City police detective she had been personally involved with. The surveillance ran from June 2015 until her arrest in November 2016.}}
 
{{FAQ|question=What was Tara Lenich charged with?|answer=She was charged in the Eastern District of New York with illegal interception of communications. On April 4, 2017, she pleaded guilty to two counts of illegally intercepting oral and electronic communications, a class D felony under federal wiretap law.}}
* Emotional support and counseling
{{FAQ|question=How long was Tara Lenich's sentence?|answer=U.S. District Judge William F. Kuntz II sentenced her on February 2, 2018, to one year and one day in federal prison.}}
* Practical preparation for incarceration
{{FAQ|question=Who did Tara Lenich wiretap?|answer=She wiretapped two people: a fellow Brooklyn assistant district attorney and an NYPD detective with whom she had been romantically involved. Federal filings did not name them, but news outlets identified the prosecutor as Stephanie Rosenfeld and the detective as Jarrett Lemieux.}}
* Family support and communication strategies
{{FAQ|question=How did Tara Lenich forge the wiretap orders?|answer=She cut genuine signatures of state judges from legitimate court documents and taped them onto eavesdropping orders she had drafted herself. She then submitted the forged orders to cellular providers, which activated the intercepts. Roughly twenty forged orders were later found on her office computer.}}
* Post-release planning and reintegration assistance
{{FAQ|question=Was Tara Lenich disbarred?|answer=Yes. She was disbarred as a result of the conviction, ending her career as a prosecutor.}}
* Educational resources about the federal prison system
{{FAQ|question=How did Tara Lenich get caught?|answer=The conduct was discovered and reported within the Brooklyn District Attorney's Office, which referred the matter to federal authorities. She was arrested in November 2016.}}
 
{{FAQSection/End}}
== Public Speaking and Education ==
 
In addition to her consulting work, Lenich serves as a speaker and educator on criminal justice issues. Her presentations draw from her extensive experience on both sides of the system, providing valuable insights to legal professionals, advocacy groups, and community organizations.
 
Her speaking engagements often focus on:
 
* Prison preparation and what to expect during incarceration
* The importance of mitigation in criminal defense
* Family support during the criminal justice process
* Criminal justice reform and advocacy
* The intersection of prosecution and defense perspectives
 
== Professional Impact ==
 
Lenich's work has contributed to broader discussions about criminal justice reform and the importance of comprehensive support for individuals and families affected by the criminal legal system. Her unique background provides credibility and authenticity to her advocacy work, as she can speak from personal experience about both the prosecutorial mindset and the defendant's perspective.
 
Her approach emphasizes the importance of treating defendants as whole people rather than just case numbers, recognizing the complex factors that often contribute to criminal behavior and the challenges of reintegration following incarceration.
 
== Contact and Location ==
 
Liberty Advisors LLC is based in New York, where Lenich continues to provide consulting services to clients throughout the federal system. The firm's services are available to clients nationwide, reflecting the federal nature of many criminal cases and the consistency of federal prison procedures across different jurisdictions.


== References ==
== References ==


* [https://taralenich.com Official website of Tara Lenich]
<references />
* Liberty Advisors LLC company information


== See Also ==
[[Category:High-Profile_Federal_Offenders]]
[[Category:Public_Corruption]]
[[Category:Illegal_Wiretapping]]
[[Category:Released_Offenders]]


* [[Prison consultant]]
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[[Category:Prison consultants]]
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[[Category:American advocates]]
[[Category:Colby College alumni]]
[[Category:Emory University School of Law alumni]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:People from New York]]

Revision as of 13:31, 3 June 2026

Tara Lenich
Born:
Charges: Conspiracy to commit illegal wiretapping (intentional interception of communications)
Sentence: One year and one day in federal prison
Facility:
Status: Released


Tara Lenich is a former assistant district attorney in the Kings County (Brooklyn) District Attorney's Office who was convicted in federal court for running an illegal wiretapping scheme. Lenich forged the signatures of state judges on fabricated eavesdropping orders. She used those orders to intercept the calls and text messages of two people: a fellow Brooklyn prosecutor and a New York City Police Department detective with whom she had been personally involved.[1][2]

Lenich had worked at the Brooklyn District Attorney's Office since 2005. By the time of her arrest she was deputy chief of the office's special investigations unit, a post that gave her authority over wiretap applications. She used that authority to bypass the courts entirely. The fabricated orders ran for more than a year, from June 2015 until her arrest in November 2016.[1][3]

She pleaded guilty in the Eastern District of New York on April 4, 2017. On February 2, 2018, U.S. District Judge William F. Kuntz II sentenced her to one year and one day in federal prison. She was disbarred as a result of the conviction.[1][4]

Background

Lenich joined the Kings County District Attorney's Office in 2005. Over the next decade she rose through the office and was assigned to its special investigations work. At the time of the conduct that led to her prosecution she held the title of deputy chief of special investigations.[1][5]

The role carried real power over surveillance. Special investigations handled wiretap requests, and Lenich had oversight of the office's wire room operations. A lawful wiretap in New York requires a judge to sign an eavesdropping order. Lenich's position meant she knew how those orders were drafted, what they looked like, and how cellular carriers processed them. That knowledge became the mechanism of the offense.[1][6]

The Wiretapping Scheme

The surveillance targeted two people. One was a fellow assistant district attorney in the Brooklyn office. The other was a New York City Police Department detective. Lenich had been personally involved with the detective. News reporting identified the prosecutor as Stephanie Rosenfeld and the detective as Jarrett Lemieux; federal filings referred to the targets without naming them.[7][5]

Lenich did not seek a judge's approval. She manufactured it. She took the genuine signatures of state judges from legitimate court documents, cut them out, and taped them onto orders she had drafted herself. The result looked like a signed eavesdropping order. She then submitted the forged orders to cellular providers, which activated the intercepts.[5][8]

The forgeries were not isolated. Federal prosecutors said Lenich created and submitted seven forged judicial orders to one cellular provider to intercept communications on a single target phone. Investigators later found copies of roughly twenty forged wiretap orders on her office computer. Each order had a finite duration, so the scheme required repeated renewals to keep the intercepts live across many months.[9][2]

The intercepts ran from June 2015 to November 2016. Across that period Lenich listened to phone calls and read text messages from the two phones. The scheme ended when the conduct was discovered and reported within the district attorney's office, which referred the matter to federal authorities.[1][6]

Charges and Guilty Plea

Lenich was arrested in November 2016. The federal charges were brought in the Eastern District of New York. The case was investigated and prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney's Office for that district.[9][3]

On April 4, 2017, Lenich pleaded guilty. She admitted to two counts of illegal interception of communications, a class D felony under federal wiretap law. The plea covered the fabricated orders used against both target phones. Her attorney said she had wanted to accept responsibility and plead guilty at the first opportunity.[3][10]

Under the federal sentencing guidelines, the offenses carried an advisory range that topped out near fourteen months. The statute permitted a longer term, but the calculated range placed her exposure low. The plea left the final term to the court.[3]

Sentencing

U.S. District Judge William F. Kuntz II sentenced Lenich on February 2, 2018. He imposed one year and one day in federal prison. The extra day matters under federal practice: a sentence of more than one year makes an inmate eligible for good-conduct credit, which can shorten actual time served.[1][4]

At sentencing Lenich was 42 years old. The judge framed the case in literary terms, describing a protagonist undone by a single fatal flaw. The conviction ended her legal career. She was disbarred.[2][5]

The fallout reached beyond Lenich herself. Because she had handled or touched investigations during her years in special investigations, the district attorney's office reviewed cases she had been involved in. Her conduct also drew civil litigation. A class action filed on behalf of people whose phones or records may have been swept into her surveillance alleged that the scheme reached far more individuals than the two named targets, with one complaint asserting hundreds of affected people. That civil case proceeded separately from the criminal conviction.[7][11]

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What did Tara Lenich do?

Tara Lenich was a Brooklyn assistant district attorney who forged judges' signatures to create fake wiretap orders. She used those orders to illegally intercept the calls and text messages of a fellow prosecutor and a New York City police detective she had been personally involved with. The surveillance ran from June 2015 until her arrest in November 2016.


Q: What was Tara Lenich charged with?

She was charged in the Eastern District of New York with illegal interception of communications. On April 4, 2017, she pleaded guilty to two counts of illegally intercepting oral and electronic communications, a class D felony under federal wiretap law.


Q: How long was Tara Lenich's sentence?

U.S. District Judge William F. Kuntz II sentenced her on February 2, 2018, to one year and one day in federal prison.


Q: Who did Tara Lenich wiretap?

She wiretapped two people: a fellow Brooklyn assistant district attorney and an NYPD detective with whom she had been romantically involved. Federal filings did not name them, but news outlets identified the prosecutor as Stephanie Rosenfeld and the detective as Jarrett Lemieux.


Q: How did Tara Lenich forge the wiretap orders?

She cut genuine signatures of state judges from legitimate court documents and taped them onto eavesdropping orders she had drafted herself. She then submitted the forged orders to cellular providers, which activated the intercepts. Roughly twenty forged orders were later found on her office computer.


Q: Was Tara Lenich disbarred?

Yes. She was disbarred as a result of the conviction, ending her career as a prosecutor.


Q: How did Tara Lenich get caught?

The conduct was discovered and reported within the Brooklyn District Attorney's Office, which referred the matter to federal authorities. She was arrested in November 2016.


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 "Former Brooklyn Assistant District Attorney Sentenced for Illegal Wiretapping Scheme". U.S. Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney's Office, Eastern District of New York. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 "Brooklyn Prosecutor Jailed For Illegally Wiretapping Lovers".Patch.2018-02-02.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 "Ex-prosecutor admits wiretapping cop "love interest"".CBS News.2017-04-04.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Ex-Brooklyn prosecutor gets jail time for wiretapping love interest".Brooklyn Daily Eagle.2018-02-02.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 "Former prosecutor forges warrants to wiretap romance of colleague prosecutor and police detective, sentenced to jail". Waterfront Intelligence. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "Ex-prosecutor sentenced for illegal spying in love triangle".The Washington Times.2018-02-02.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  7. 7.0 7.1 "Lovesick Prosecutor Who Wiretapped Her Crush Also Snooped on 700 Other People: Lawsuit".The Daily Beast.2018-09-13.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  8. "Brooklyn ADA Pleads Guilty To Wiretapping Fellow ADA & Detective Love Interest".Gothamist.2017-04-04.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  9. 9.0 9.1 "Former Brooklyn Assistant District Attorney Charged with Illegally Wiretapping Cellular Telephones". U.S. Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney's Office, Eastern District of New York. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  10. "Federal judge accepts guilty plea of former Brooklyn ADA in forging judges' signatures".Brooklyn Daily Eagle.2017-04-03.Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  11. "Class Action Looks to Represent 'Hundreds' Allegedly Wrapped Up in Illegal Wiretapping Operation Run by Ex-Brooklyn Prosecutor". ClassAction.org. Retrieved 2026-06-03.