Keith Bee
Keith A. Bee is a retired judge, federal felon, and former member of the Arizona House of Representatives and the Arizona State Senate.
House & Senate
Bee served in the Arizona State House from January 1991 to January 1993. He then served in the State Senate from January 1993 to January 2001, representing District 9.He was succeeded in office by his brother, Timothy. In 2002, Bee was an unsuccessful candidate in the Republican primary for Arizona Superintendent of Public Instruction.
Justice Court
In 2007, he was appointed as Justice of the Peace Bee. He faced an election challenge from Wesley Kent for the September 2, 2008 primary and initially lost. He took the case to the Arizona Supreme Court and prevailed.Tax evasion
Justice of the Peace Bee resigned on August 4, 2018. Reports published shortly afterward indicated that his early departure was likely related to a four-count federal indictment alleging the filing of false statements on three years of tax returns for his business, Bee Line Bus Transportation.A change-of-plea hearing was scheduled for August 27, 2021.Bee subsequently pleaded guilty to Count 3 of the indictment, which charged that on October 15, 2014, he filed a false Internal Revenue Service Form 1040 reporting $4,441,113 in business expenses. The figure included personal expenses and the depreciation of personal assets treated as business assets, which Bee acknowledged he did not believe to be accurate. Sentencing was initially set for November 9, but on October 8 the parties filed a stipulation requesting that the date be vacated and reset.
On November 29, Defense Counsel Michael Piccarreta and Assistant United States Attorney David R. Zipps filed a second stipulation to continue sentencing. Piccarreta was engaged in a separate vehicular-murder trial scheduled to begin on February 15, 2022, and the defense stated it required additional time to prepare objections to the Presentence Investigation Report. Judge James Soto granted the request, setting a new sentencing date of March 16, 2022, at 3:00 p.m. Objections to the Presentence Investigation Report were due January 14, 2022, and the government was directed to file responses by February 11, 2022. Bee faced a potential sentence of up to ten months in prison or home confinement, along with $343,000 in restitution to the Internal Revenue Service.
On March 16, 2022, Bee was sentenced by U.S. District Judge James A. Soto to six months in federal prison, followed by one year of supervised release. He was ordered to pay $343,000 in restitution and interest. Although public records indicated that Bee owned real estate valued at more than $3 million, his attorney described him as indigent, and the court waived a potential fine of $250,000 on the basis that he lacked the ability to pay.