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Weed Man Guilty of 28 Felony Counts
Chiropractor faces about 25 years in prison over money laundering, fraud
By Jim Schultz
Saturday, June 7, 2008
SACRAMENTO -- A 55-year-old Weed man was convicted by a federal jury Thursday of
28 felony counts of money laundering and bankruptcy fraud.
Thomas M. Klassy, a former Weaverville chiropractor, faces up to about 25 years in prison
and up to $750,000 in fines. He is being held without bail at Sacramento County Jail and is set for
sentencing Aug. 14. He faces eight to 10 years in federal prison.
A federal grand jury indicted Klassy in 2005 on charges of money laundering, making false
declarations and concealing property in a bankruptcy case, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew
Stegman.
Klassy was convicted of the felony charges after a three-week trial in U.S. District Court.
Stegman and Assistant U.S. Attorney Russell Carlberg, who both prosecuted the case, said
Friday that evidence introduced at trial showed that Klassy committed perjury during bankruptcy
proceedings and concealed substantial assets from the bankruptcy court.
Stegman said Klassy lied under oath, claiming that he did not own an airplane, a pickup, a
one-third interest in a 220-acre ranch, $205,000 he received for the sale of his chiropractic business
and two shell corporations named Rose Ventures Inc. and Aromor Inc., which he used to hide many
of his assets, Stegman said.
Klassy said that he sold his chiropractic business for $60,000, but he really sold it for
$265,000 and gave a bankruptcy court trustee a forged contract for the lesser amount, Stegman said.
He also was convicted of money laundering for funneling the money he received through the
sale of his business through an attorney's trust account and then back to Rose Ventures Inc. and
Aromor Inc. bank accounts, Stegman said.
In a separate state case, Klassy was arrested in April on suspicion of illegally prescribing
medical marijuana to patients.
He was charged in Siskiyou County Superior Court with practicing medicine without a
certificate and advertising as a doctor without a valid certificate.
His medicinal marijuana case is still pending in Siskiyou County Superior Court, but court
documents allege that Klassy also possessed illegal explosives and firearms, including an anti-tank
rocket, at his Old Edgewood Road property. The documents say he also threatened a witness, Caleb
Cheyenne Wolfe, then 28, in connection with those alleged crimes.
Klassy has not been charged in those cases, but Wolfe, who lived on Klassy's property, was
arrested along with him in April.
Wolfe was arrested on suspicion of making a destructive device without a permit, possessing
a destructive device, possessing fireworks without a permit, possessing a controlled substance and
marijuana possession.
Wolfe's next court appearance is June 19.
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