Tax Cheat Rap Sheet:
Week ending June 1, 2007

June 3, 2007

Criminal_2_2 For this week’s look at tax cheats, we’re going with just two cases because this weekend has turned out to be just as overloaded as Monday through Friday was.

But I think you’ll find each instance ranks quite high in the "you’ve got to be kidding" category.

First, we have another big accounting firm involved with bogus tax shelters, a la KPMG and Jenkens & Gilchrist. So what, you say?

Here’s what: Federal prosecutors say one of the illegal shelters devised by Ernst & Young employees used the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks as the basis to cheat the government of hundreds of millions of tax dollars.

Martin Nissenbaum, Richard Shapiro, Robert Coplan and Brian Vaughan were indicted by a New York-based federal grand jury last week. They allegedly set up illegal shelters for E&Y clients with taxable income generally in excess of $10-to-$20 million in order to eliminate or reduce federal taxes.

Prosecutors say the employees, two of whom no longer work for E&Y, created "false and fraudulent factual
scenarios" such as the World Trade Center attacks, which sent the value
of investments plunging.

After obtaining the shelters’ tax benefits, according to the indictment, some of the clients terminated their trading partnerships using a letter devised by one of the defendants in which "clients falsely attributed their decision to discontinue their trading activities to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and to ‘possible economic repercussions resulting from such attacks.’"

Not that you expect decorum and class when it comes to tax cheating, but using 9/11 is particularly distasteful.

‘Poor pitiful me:’ For our second tax crime this week, we turn to a Florida woman who finally has to pay, sort of, for stiffing Uncle Sam of more than $3 million.

Mary Ham was convicted in January, along with her boyfriend, for refusing to pay $3.6 million in taxes, interest and penalties. Last week, she was sentenced to two years in federal prison. That was less than half the recommended jail time.

Apparently, the judge bought Ham’s tearful argument that she "allowed dominant men in [her] life to be in control." Yeah, that and dominant greed.

Ham and her co-defendant in the case, Fred Suttles, owned Diamond Brokers of Northwest
Florida. He also is the father of her younger daughter. In April, the same judge sentenced Suttles to
14 years.

At least Ham also got three years of supervised release after her prison term and was fined a <cough> whopping <cough> $10,000.

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Tax Season 2026 Continues!

We made it. Tax Day 2025 is finally over. For most of us. When the filing season started on Jan. 26, millions who were expecting refunds filed immediately. Most of us got our returns to the Internal Revenue Service by April 15. But plenty of taxpayers also got extensions. They are looking at an Oct. 15 filing deadline.

Those procrastinating filers aren’t a problem. In fact, the IRS appreciates taxpayers who take time to fill out their 1040 forms correctly. It also is grateful that tax submissions are spread out a bit, especially now that the IRS is a leaner agency. Processing returns is easier when they arrive throughout the year instead of in massive bunches.

But enough about Uncle Sam’s tax collection issues. The focus now is on all y’all who filed for extensions, giving you another six months to complete your return. Since your new mid-October due date will be here before you know it, let’s get started now on meeting it.

The ol’ blog is here to help you finish up your extended Form 1040. You can start with January’s tax tips page, which has links to the rest of the year’s tips by-month collections. You also can peruse various tax categories for more tailored advice by clicking on the More Tax Posts drop-down menu at the top of this (and every) page.

And to make sure you don’t miss your new filing deadline, the count-down clock below will let you know just how much time you to file by Oct. 15. At the latest.e. (Note: I’m in the Central Time Zone, so adjust accordingly for where you live.)

Comments
  • Referring to allegations of tax fraud as “tax crimes”, and referring to them as “tax cheating” and “distasteful” is un-American, since allegations are only allegations. The government has been piling on for awhile, as the softening of the Kpmg tax “fraud” case indicates. Furthermore, those writing about such matters rarely understand much about the actual facts and transactions underneath, and thus understand little of the merits (or lack thereof) of the government’s allegations. My advice is to be more skeptical of allegations, less cynical towards those who muct defend themselves against them, more respectful of the rights of honest taxpayers to minimize their tax burdens, and stop with the contempt prior to investigation.

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