California man pleads guilty to investment scheme, elder scam & tax evasion totaling $4.3 million

June 30, 2022

Dealing with the normal ups and, too frequently of late, downs of the stock market is enough of a worry. But things can quickly go even further downhill when crooks use fake investments to defraud victims.

Not surprisingly, those criminals often get greedier and try to cheat Uncle Sam, too.

Such overreach, however, didn’t work out well for one California man.

Robert Louis Cirillo of Chino Hills pleaded guilty in federal court on Tuesday, June 28, to charges of defrauding investors of $3.2 million, as well as scamming an elderly man of hundreds of thousands of dollars, and cheating on his federal taxes.

$3.2 million in stock fraud: According to the plea agreement announced by the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Central District of California, from 2014 to 2021 Cirillo deceived more than 100 victims by telling them he would investing their money in short-term construction loans that would pay return rates ranging from 15-to-30 percent.

As part of the scheme, the 61-year-old former stock broker showed his actual and prospective victim-investors fabricated bank statements that purported to show the investments’ growth.

In reality, say prosecutors, Cirillo never invested the victims’ money. Instead, he used it for his own personal expenses, including credit card payments, a trip to Las Vegas, and two vehicles, a Jeep and an Alfa Romeo.

Cirillo admitted to targeting members of the Hispanic community, many of whom were of limited means, for his fraudulent scheme. Federal investigators say one victim invested her life savings of $20,000 in Cirillo’s scheme.

Additional elder scam: In the spring of 2021, Cirillo and co-conspirators also employed a fake grandson-in-trouble scheme to deceive a senior citizen, according to federal investigators.

The scammers convinced their victim that his grandson had been arrested on narcotics possession charges, which was false, and got the older man to hand over nearly $400,000 for the fake bail.

Again, say Department of Justice (DoJ) officials, Cirillo used some of that victim’s money for his own personal benefit.

Tax evasion, too: As part of the plea, Cirillo also admitted to filing false income tax returns for the years 2015, 2016, and 2017. On those filings, Internal Revenue Service investigators who assisted with the case said he failed to report a total of more than $3 million in income.

For example, on his 2017 federal income tax return, the IRS says Cirillo reported total income of $30,985. In reality, according to tax officials, Cirillo made more than $1.9 million that year on his investment fraud scheme and didn’t report those ill-gotten gains.

Overall, say federal law enforcement officials, Cirillo’s illegal schemes cost a total of just more than $4.3 million. The losses, per investigators from the DoJ, IRS, and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), break out as

  • $3,237,262 from the investment fraud;
  • $399,550 from the defrauding conspiracy of the senior citizen; and
  • $675,898 from Cirillo’s unpaid federal taxes.

4 decades in jail possible: Cirillo’s sentencing hearing on the formal plea-agreed charges of one count of securities fraud, one count of filing a false tax return, and one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud is scheduled for Sept. 6.

He faces a potential statutory maximum sentence of 43 years in federal prison.

You also might find these items of interest:

 

Advertisements

 

 


 




 

Share:

The More Tax Posts tab at the top of this page will take you to, well, more tax posts. You also can search below for a tax topic. 

Latest Posts
The latest Dirty Dozen tax scam list is familiar because too many are still falling for the schemes

March 5, 2026

Tax filing season is also peak time for tax scams. Be on the lookout for…

Read More
Hello Tax Season 2026

Happy New Tax Year! Are you ready to file your 2025 tax return? I know, too early to ask. But Tax Day 2026 will be here before we realize it. The Internal Revenue Service deadline to file and pay any tax we owe is the regular April 15 date this year. It’s also Tax Day for most of the states that collect income taxes from their residents, which is most of the states! If that seems too far away right now, don’t worry. As is the case every tax season, the ol’ blog’s tips and other tax reminders should help all of us meet our state and federal responsibilities. Procrastinators also will want to keep an eye on the countdown clock just below. It tracks how much time we have until April’s Tax Day, just in case we put off our annual tax task until the absolutely final hours and decide we need to instead get an extension request into the IRS by that date. (Note: I’m in the Central Time Zone, so adjust accordingly for where you live.)

Comments
Leave the first comment