Washington, D.C.—November 3, 2025— Kanter Financial Forensics, LLC, a forensic accounting firm based in the Tampa, Florida area, is proud to announce the opening of its second office in the heart of Washington, D.C. The new location at 1701 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Suite 200, Washington, DC 20006 is now open for business and can be reached at 771-208-5070.
“Our decision to expand into Washington D.C. was driven by the region’s dynamic legal market and sophisticated client base,” said founding partner Brad Kanter. “Law firms in the District regularly handle complex matters—ranging from high-net-worth divorce cases to commercial litigation and fraud investigations—that demand the precision and insight of forensic accounting.”
Located just steps from the White House and with easy access to the Farragut North and Farragut West metro stations, the D.C. location is convenient to meeting clients within the District as well as the neighboring states of Maryland and Virginia.
Kanter Financial Forensics looks forward to supporting attorneys and their clients with expert financial analysis, litigation support, and investigative services tailored to the demands of the D.C. legal landscape.
Kanter Financial Forensics, LLC is a Florida-based forensic accounting firm offering litigation support services to attorneys in legal disputes. It was founded by Brad Kanter in 2021 and is an outgrowth of Kanter Consulting Group, P.A., a full-service Florida accounting firm formed in 2002.
Mr. Kanter is licensed as a CPA in Florida and the District of Columbia. Kanter Financial Forensics works with attorneys in both locations.
KFF concentrates on the services listed below.
State and federal courts have approved Brad Kanter as an expert witness in the areas of bankruptcy, business torts, business valuations, fraud (construction, securities, other), marital dissolution accounting, tax disputes, and wrongful termination.
KFF extends its advisory services to include asset identification, tracing and recovery; asset misappropriation; breach of contract; breach of fiduciary duty; corporate and partnership dissolutions; court appointments as receiverships and monitorships; franchise disputes; and white-collar investigations.