On the record
Chicago: Attorney Michael Abramson, of Wilmette Illinois, has been convicted of tax fraud, attempting to tamper with a witness and violating a court order.
Abramson filed and caused to be filed false individual returns for himself and false corporate returns for a company in which he held an ownership interest, Illinois-based Leasing Employment Services Co. Inc.
Abramson also provided more than $1 million for personal expenses to a woman with whom he was romantically involved, then deducted what were falsely characterized as commissions or loans and included the fraudulent loans as an asset on the company’s returns. The expenses included money for a condo, luxury automobiles and travel, shopping and restaurants.
Following the indictment in this case, the court ordered Abramson not to contact witnesses, including his bookkeeper. Weeks before trial last February, Abramson gave the bookkeeper a copy of her previous court testimony on which he had handwritten notes changing or otherwise scripting her answers. The bookkeeper turned the transcript over to law enforcement.
Sentencing is May 1.
Mustang, Oklahoma: Education official Kim Weinrich has pleaded guilty to wire fraud and to making and subscribing a false return.
Between 2014 and April 2022, Weinrich was employed by Mustang Public Schools District as payroll supervisor and was promoted to director of payroll services in 2021.
Beginning in 2016, Weinrich manipulated the district’s payroll accounting software to increase her net pay each period, depositing the stolen money into her personal bank account. Weinrich’s scheme also resulted in several district employees underreporting federal and state withholdings.
Between July 2016 and April 2022, Weinrich defrauded the district of some $471,657.91.
She also manipulated the payroll software to make it appear as if she’d paid substantial federal income taxes when she’d had no federal income taxes withheld. In April 2022, she filed a federal return reporting income of $91,295, substantially lower than her real income from the scheme.
She faces up to 23 years in prison and fines up to $350,000.
Newark, New Jersey: A federal court has held in contempt tax preparer Abraham Taylor, a resident of Florida and formerly of New Jersey, for continuing to prepare returns after the court permanently barred him and his business, Chentay Consulting Services LP (d.b.a. CCS Tax Services) from preparing federal income tax returns for others.
According to the court’s order, Taylor concealed his violations of the permanent injunction by using e-filing privileges assigned to Fredrick Gibson, of Uncle Sam Tax Services in Pennsylvania. Taylor agreed to the entry of the contempt order and a disgorgement judgment; Gibson agreed to forfeit his e-filing privileges.
Taylor was held in contempt in 2021 for using e-filing privileges assigned to his son O’Neal Taylor and his son’s business. Through the contempt order, Taylor agreed to a disgorgement judgment and O’Neal agreed to forfeit his e-filing privileges.
The most recent contempt order requires Taylor to provide the U.S. with a list of his clients and to send a copy of the court’s injunction order to all clients for whom he prepared returns. It also provides that the court can order the sale of Taylor’s house to satisfy the two disgorgement judgments if he continues to prepare returns.
Washington, D.C.: CPA Timothy Trifilo has pleaded guilty to making a false statement on a mortgage loan application and to failing to file an income tax return.
Trifilo worked in tax compliance for several large accounting and finance firms. In recent years, he was managing director at a tax firm where he specialized in transaction structuring and advisory service, tax compliance and tax due diligence.
For a decade, Trifilo did not file federal income tax returns or pay all his taxes despite earning more than $7.7 million during that time. He caused a tax loss to the IRS of $2,057,256.40.
In February 2023, Trifilo sought a $1.36 million bank-financed loan to purchase a home in the District of Columbia. After the mortgage company told him that the bank would not approve the loan without copies of his filed returns, Trifilo provided the mortgage company with fabricated documents to make it appear as if he had filed returns and provided copies of 2020 and 2021 returns that Trifilo in fact had never filed with the IRS.
On these returns and other documents, Trifilo listed a former colleague as the individual who prepared the returns and uploaded them for filing with the IRS. This individual did not prepare the returns, had never prepared returns for Trifilo and did not authorize Trifilo to use his name on the returns and other documents. Based on false representation, the bank approved the loan and Trifilo purchased the home.
Sentencing is May 19. Trifilo faces up to 30 years in prison on the charge of making a false statement on a loan application and a maximum of a year on the charge of failure to file a tax return. He also faces a period of supervised release, monetary penalties and restitution.
San Diego: Business owner Wahead Raz has pleaded guilty to paying an IRS officer $35,000 to erase a six-figure tax debt.
On July 23, Raz offered the bribe to an IRS revenue officer during a meeting at the San Diego IRS office to discuss his outstanding tax debt of some $500,000. After the meeting, the IRS officer reported the bribe to the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration and agreed to be part of an undercover operation.
The next day, TIGTA video-recorded a meeting between the IRS officer and Raz during which Raz told the officer that he could pay in cash so the bribe would not be traceable. On July 25, the IRS officer recorded a call during which Raz said, “If you save me money, then I’ll take care of you,” and asked the officer to name a price. When the officer asked for $30,000, Raz countered with $20,000. After the IRS officer insisted on $30,000, Raz agreed, offering to pay $10,000 up front and the remaining $20,000 when the debt was cleared.
On July 30, TIGTA recorded a meeting between the IRS officer and Raz during which the latter provided the $10,000 cash and asked the officer to eliminate some $50,000 in tax debt owed by Raz’s business; Raz offered to pay the officer an additional $5,000 to have that debt cancelled.
On August 22, TIGTA recorded another meeting during which Raz gave the officer $15,000 in cash and told the officer he did not have the entire $25,000 originally agreed upon. On August 29, Raz paid $10,000 cash to complete the bribe. During two of the recorded meetings, Raz also offered to introduce to the officer other “clients” who also owed federal taxes and said he would introduce the agent once Raz’s tax debt was cleared.
Sentencing is March 19.
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