It reached 98 F here in Irvine today. That’s hot. But I have three stories where the individuals involved have faced the heat of tax evasion.
First, yet another Bozo tax preparer. Well, she really wasn’t a tax preparer but she did prepare returns. From Greenville, South Carolina comes a truly Bozo scheme. A mother, Martha Vernon, stole social security numbers and names from her job, and then filed tax returns with phony W-2s where the refunds were direct deposited into her bank account and that of her daughter, Tiffany Dunbar. All told they received $188,931 in refunds out of the $396,573 they looked to get. Why was this scheme truly Bozo? First, it’s inevitable that the actual individuals would file their own tax returns, so the crime was destined to be discovered. Second, the mother and daughter had the money sent into their own bank accounts making it quite easy to figure out who was behind the crime. They pleaded guilty to tax evasion charges last week in Greenville; a sentencing date hasn’t been announced.
Next, we head to Long Island, New York where Jay Kuhn was sentenced to six months at a halfway house, three years of supervised release, and restitution of $400,000. Mr. Kuhn employed illegal aliens in construction on Long Island and he paid them off the books. He didn’t remit the income and payroll taxes owed, and that’s tax evasion. He pleaded guilty and is cooperating in an investigation of building trades in the New York metro area.
Finally, we have a case of a slight difference of opinion. Perry Lee Rempas ran Norfolk Airport Express, presumably taking customers to and from Norfolk’s airport. He told the IRS that his business was defunct in 2000 and 2001, but he had $1 million in gross receipts. Indeed, the business had the contract for ground transportation at Norfolk International Airport from 2003 through 2006 until it was canceled when the business didn’t pay the airport. Mr. Rempas pleaded guilty to tax evasion and will have to make restitution of $79,000 and will spend five months at ClubFed. He also, according to this article in the Norfolk Pilot, faces a state court judgment of $86,987 for his failure to pay the airport authority.
It remains a lot cheaper to pay your taxes up front then to commit tax evasion, especially if you elect a truly Bozo method of evasion.