A former partner at major international law firms was accused on Tuesday of making false statements to a U.S. bankruptcy court, part of what U.S. prosecutors alleged was an effort to hold onto a multi-million dollar house and a luxury sports car despite owing millions in unpaid taxes, Reuters reported. John Roesser, a former international arbitration lawyer, was charged with submitting falsified records and making false statements in a bankruptcy, according to an indictment unsealed in New York federal court. Roesser was arrested yesterday morning in Bronxville, N.Y., and was set to make his first court appearance later in the day. Roesser was a partner with at least three law firms, Alston & Bird; Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer; and Dechert, between 2013 and 2018, according to prior online announcements and court records. He resigned from the bar in 2020 after admitting to misappropriating about $100,000 from a client following a post-arbitration settlement, according to New York state court records. By 2022, Roesser owed the Internal Revenue Service more than $3 million in unpaid income taxes and filed for personal bankruptcy, according to the indictment. Roesser told the U.S. bankruptcy court in New York and the IRS that he would soon receive millions from a real estate commission to help pay his debts, a claim that turned out to be false, prosecutors alleged.