The bigger they come, the harder they fall. So goes the cliche, and so also go the owners of Circle Industries in Alpharetta, Georgia.
Gerald Marchelletta, Sr., and Gerald Marchelletta, Jr., own Circle Industries. They specialize in drywall construction, and worked on the Olympic Village in Atlanta and the Atlantis Hotel & Casino in the Bahamas. They and their bookkeeper, Theresa Kottwitz, decided that rules were unimportant and they would deduct personal expenses on their business tax returns.
Now, we’re not talking about a few pens and pencils here, or a couple of bags of cement. The news story states that testimony in their trial showed that the owners each built million dollar homes with this money. Other personal expenses charged to their business included clothing, landscaping at a New York home, and visits to Atlanta’s Gold Club.
Now, I don’t know if the trips to the Adult Entertainment club led to the investigation that resulted in the charges in this case. It wouldn’t surprise me, though, if that were the case. Somehow, strip clubs and tax evasion go together. But I digress….
US Attorney David Nahmias called this, “This was a case of pure greed, in which the defendants tried to defraud the United States Treasury of over $1 million.” Given federal sentencing guidelines, the trio, when sentenced early next year, will have plenty of time to reflect while at ClubFed.