He was a leading art dealer. Now, the 80-year-old could face more than a decade in prison

LOS ANGELES, CA - APRIL 01: Art dealer Douglas Chrismas attend MOCA's Leadership Circle and Members' Opening of "Carl Andre: Sculpture as Place, 1958-2010" and "Arthur Jafa: Love Is The Message, The Message Is Death" on April 1, 2017 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Donato Sardella/Getty Images for MOCA)
Douglas Chrismas pictured on April 1, 2017 in Los Angeles, California. (Donato Sardella/Getty Images for MOCA)

As prosecutors told it, Douglas Chrismas, once known as one of the nation’s leading dealers of contemporary art, was a man so consumed by greed and ego that he embezzled hundreds of thousands of dollars from his gallery’s bankruptcy estate to put toward the rent on a museum dedicated to himself.

Chrismas, founder of Ace Gallery, had "champagne wishes and caviar dreams," Asst. U.S. Atty. Valerie Makarewicz told a jury in an embezzlement trial that began this week in federal court. Being responsible with money, she told the jury, "didn’t matter."

But as his defense attorneys argued, Chrismas wanted to open that museum as a gift to Los Angeles and had used the money to pay its rent in an effort to ultimately help the bankruptcy estate.

Who the 80-year-old really is, and what his motivations were, would boil down to whose depiction the jury believed: that of the prosecution or the defense.

Megan Maitia, Chrismas’ attorney, likened the interpretation of the evidence to the famous duck-rabbit illusion, an ambiguous drawing in which either animal can be seen depending on the person looking. The same evidence the prosecution presents, Maitia said, "can mean the opposite."

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"In the end, the government is going to tell you and argue to you that they've proven all of the elements of embezzlement on a bankruptcy estate," Maitia said. "With that same evidence we're going to get up and argue and put on a case of a man who was desperate to save his business and it's going to be up to you to decide which way you see it."

On Friday, after less than an hour of deliberation, the jury offered their verdict on who had painted Chrismas best, finding him guilty of embezzling more than $260,000 from the bankruptcy estate of Ace Gallery while he acted as the estate’s trustee and custodian.

He faces a statutory maximum sentence of 15 years in federal prison.

It was the latest fall for the octogenarian who championed pioneering artists and sculptors such as Robert Irwin, Michael Heizer, Sol LeWitt, Bruce Nauman and Sam Francis, but who early on garnered a reputation for shady business dealings.

Chrismas, who opened his first gallery at 17, has lived and operated art galleries in L.A. since 1969.

Legal troubles and controversies have dogged him since, including a score of civil lawsuits alleging that Chrismas failed to pay artists for their work and had not delivered artworks bought and paid for by collectors. (Even Andy Warhol reportedly complained about missing payments from Chrismas).