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What happens when the person documenting a fraud has no idea he’s filming evidence?
In this episode of Tax Crime Junkies, Dominique sits down with Steve Beal, the videographer who spent years capturing the rise of DC Solar from the inside. Steve was hired to film the success story: the NASCAR sponsorships, the lavish holiday parties, the green-energy branding, and the larger-than-life image Jeff and Paulette Carpoff built around the company.
But after the FBI raided DC Solar in December 2018, Steve’s footage took on a whole new meaning.
This episode explores what it was like to be one of the people inside the company who believed in the mission, trusted the leadership, and only later realized he had been standing in the middle of one of the biggest renewable energy frauds in U.S. history.
Dominique and Steve talk about the emotional side of fraud that rarely gets attention: the employees, contractors, and insiders who were not masterminds, not investors, and not whistleblowers — just people who believed they were helping build something real.
Along the way, Steve shares how a traumatic experience at the Las Vegas Route 91 shooting deepened his bond with the DC Solar team, how the company culture discouraged questions, and what it felt like to slowly piece together the truth after everything collapsed.
By the end, this becomes more than a fraud story. It becomes a story about belief, loyalty, hindsight, and what happens when the camera keeps rolling long after the illusion starts to crack.
Fraud stories often focus on the architects of the scheme or the dollars lost. This episode focuses on the people caught in the middle — the employees who showed up to work, did their jobs, trusted the wrong people, and had their lives upended overnight.
It’s a powerful reminder that when something looks wildly successful from the outside, the truth underneath may be something very different.
Sometimes the people closest to the story do not realize what they are looking at until it is already over.
And sometimes the camera captures more truth than anyone intended.
By Dominique Molina4.4
2828 ratings
What happens when the person documenting a fraud has no idea he’s filming evidence?
In this episode of Tax Crime Junkies, Dominique sits down with Steve Beal, the videographer who spent years capturing the rise of DC Solar from the inside. Steve was hired to film the success story: the NASCAR sponsorships, the lavish holiday parties, the green-energy branding, and the larger-than-life image Jeff and Paulette Carpoff built around the company.
But after the FBI raided DC Solar in December 2018, Steve’s footage took on a whole new meaning.
This episode explores what it was like to be one of the people inside the company who believed in the mission, trusted the leadership, and only later realized he had been standing in the middle of one of the biggest renewable energy frauds in U.S. history.
Dominique and Steve talk about the emotional side of fraud that rarely gets attention: the employees, contractors, and insiders who were not masterminds, not investors, and not whistleblowers — just people who believed they were helping build something real.
Along the way, Steve shares how a traumatic experience at the Las Vegas Route 91 shooting deepened his bond with the DC Solar team, how the company culture discouraged questions, and what it felt like to slowly piece together the truth after everything collapsed.
By the end, this becomes more than a fraud story. It becomes a story about belief, loyalty, hindsight, and what happens when the camera keeps rolling long after the illusion starts to crack.
Fraud stories often focus on the architects of the scheme or the dollars lost. This episode focuses on the people caught in the middle — the employees who showed up to work, did their jobs, trusted the wrong people, and had their lives upended overnight.
It’s a powerful reminder that when something looks wildly successful from the outside, the truth underneath may be something very different.
Sometimes the people closest to the story do not realize what they are looking at until it is already over.
And sometimes the camera captures more truth than anyone intended.

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