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Don't Mess With TaxesTaxes. Sure you hate 'em, but you're stuck with 'em. Either that, or you're stuck in a federal jail cell. We'll make your tax tasks less, well, taxing, and help cure your personal finance ills with regular dosesof money news, notices, tips, commentary, insight and humor, courtesy of Texas journalist Kay Bell. |
Tax Cheat Rap Sheet:
week Ending May 12, 2007
For the second week, although a day late this time (the inaugural roundup was May 4), I did a search of tax crimes. Here's the current batch of convicted tax miscreants.
We start with a former IRS director, Jesse Ayala Cota, who pleaded guilty in a Kansas City, Kan., court to promoting a tax-fraud scheme through his accounting firm.
Cost to the U.S. Treasury: $1.3 million. Cota, according to court documents, pocketed $300,000.
Between 1997 and 2002, he prepared bogus tax returns based on “false and misleading representations” to clients. Cota admitted to using his former position with the IRS in San Diego to convince clients that they were eligible for illegal tax deductions.
We stay in Kansas for a millionaire couple convicted of tax fraud after taking advantage of benefits meant for working families. James and Shirley Aldridge were found guilty last week of five counts each of aiding and abetting the filing of false tax returns between 2000 and 2004.
Court documents revealed that the Lee's Summit, Kan., couple reportedly earned more than $1.6 million, which they hid from the Internal Revenue Service through a personal charitable foundation and a series of trusts.
Then, according to trial evidence, the Aldridges claimed the earned income tax credit, a tax break designed to benefit the working poor. The false claim allowed them to evade more than $650,000 in federal taxes.
Our third tax cheat comes from Montana, where Rolan Becker of Ronan was found guilty by a federal jury of three counts of tax fraud. Becker failed to pay taxes or file returns for three years, starting in 2000.
Prosecutors said Becker also filed false W-4 forms to avoid having federal taxes withheld from his paycheck and transferred his home and vehicles to limited liability corporations so they could not be seized to pay back taxes.
The tax toll came to around $30,000 in back IRS obligations; the amount will go up when interest and penalties are added.
Finally this week, we have a Providence, R.I., accountant sentenced to a year in prison for filing false tax returns over four years.
Irwin Kalmer pleaded guilty last December to failure to report about $313,000 in income earned for tax years 1999 to 2002. In addition to the jail time, which he must start serving by July 13, Kalmer also paid $88,000 in back taxes, plus interest and penalties, and surrendered his accounting license.
There were more, but I have other things to do this Saturday night.
So that's our line-up for this Mother's Day weekend. Not really a group to make a mother proud, unless mom happened to be Ma Barker.
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