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Tax Fraud Blotter: Needing relief

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Nothing but the tooth; an offer she can’t refuse; patterns of filing; and other highlights of recent tax cases.

Fort Collins, Colorado: Dr. Ryan Ulibarri, a dentist, has pleaded guilty to six counts of tax evasion related to his use of an illegal tax shelter.

Since 2014 Ulibarri owned and operated Ulibarri Family Dentistry. In 2016, he purchased an abusive-trust tax shelter for $50,000. The shelter concealed income and created phony deductions through a so-called business trust, family trust, charitable trust and a private family foundation, all of which Ulibarri created and controlled. From 2017 through 2022, he used this shelter to conceal from the IRS more than $3.5 million in income from his dental practice.

As the purported trustee, Ulibarri signed trust instruments purporting to create the three trusts and the foundation, and opened bank accounts in the name of each. He recruited friends to falsely sign his trust instruments as the purported creators. Ulibarri transferred majority ownership of his practice to the business trust despite having been warned by attorneys and CPAs that in Colorado a trust could not own a dental practice.

He then transferred more than $3 million from his practice to create the illusion that the funds belonged to those entities. Ulibarri retained complete control over the funds and used them to pay for personal expenses including his home mortgage, credit card bills, boats and professional baseball season tickets.

He filed false returns for himself, his dental practice and the trusts and foundation that falsely reported the income he earned from his practice as income of the trusts. Ulibarri also claimed fraudulent deductions for his personal living expenses, which he disguised as trust expenses and charitable donations.

Ulibarri is alleged to have caused a total tax loss to the IRS exceeding $1 million.

Sentencing is June 17. He faces up to five years in prison for each count of tax evasion, as well as a period of supervised release, restitution and monetary penalties. 

Kingsport, Tennessee: Resident Aylissa Glidewell has pleaded guilty to conspiring to commit wire and mail fraud after making claims for refunds of false pandemic tax credits.

She conspired to file false returns seeking fraudulent refunds based on the Employee Retention Credit and paid sick and family leave credit by creating phony businesses. She filed numerous false returns for those businesses and directed the refunds to addresses that she and conspirators controlled.

In total, the refunds claimed exceeded $3.4 million, of which the IRS paid some $1.8 million.

Sentencing is July 9. She faces a maximum of 20 years in prison.

Irvine, California: Iris Ramaya Au, former girlfriend of cryptocurrency fraudster Adam Iza, who dubbed himself “The Godfather,” has agreed to plead guilty to a federal tax charge for failing to report more than $2.6 million she’d obtained via her then-boyfriend’s criminal activity.

From 2020 to 2024, Iza obtained millions of dollars of unreported income from a series of crimes, including fraudulently obtaining access to advertising accounts and lines of credit provided by Facebook and Meta Platforms and selling access to those accounts. He also engaged active Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department deputies to provide private security for him and caused the deputies, among other things, to obtain court-authorized search warrants and confidential law enforcement information targeting people with whom he had financial and personal disputes.

On Jan. 30, Iza pleaded guilty; his sentencing is June 16, when he will face up to 35 years in prison. He has been in federal custody since September.

Au created shell corporations and opened bank accounts in the names of those entities. She then used the illicit funds in those accounts to pay some $1 million to the deputies, mostly in cash, purchase or lease luxury real estate, cars, jewelry and clothing, pay for recreational activity for Iza and herself valued at nearly $10 million and to acquire some $16 million in cryptocurrency for Iza.

Au admitted that she transferred more than $2.6 million from these accounts to her personal bank accounts from 2020 through 2023, income that she failed to report to the IRS on her federal returns.

After pleading guilty, Au will face up to three years in prison.

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Orlando, Florida: Marielys Feliciano Rodriguez has been sentenced to a year of house arrest and ordered to pay $3,338,558 in restitution to the IRS for wire and tax fraud. 

Rodriguez established a shell company that purported to be involved in the construction industry. She obtained a workers’ compensation insurance policy in the name of the company to cover a minimal payroll for a few purported employees, then “rented” the insurance to work crews who had obtained subcontracts with construction contractors on projects in Florida counties, as well as to contractors in other states. Rodriguez sent the contractors a certificate as “proof” that the work crews had workers’ comp. The scheme also facilitated avoidance of the higher cost of adequate workers’ comp for the workers on the crews to whom Rodriguez rented insurance.

The contractors issued payroll checks for the workers’ wages to the shell companies and Rodriguez cashed these checks and then distributed the cash to the work crews after deducting their fee, which was typically about 6% of the payroll. Rodriguez cashed payroll checks totaling some $13 million.

Neither the shell company nor the contractors reported to government authorities the wages that were paid to the workers, nor did they pay either the employees’ or the employer’s portion of payroll taxes, totaling more than $3 million.

She was ordered to serve five years of supervised release as well, and the court also entered a money judgment for $347,760, the proceeds of the wire fraud.

Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Tax preparer Whylithia R. Robinson has been held in contempt for violating a permanent injunction that prohibited her and her business, AAA Tax Service LLC, from preparing, filing or assisting in the preparation or filing of federal returns for others.

The U.S. filed a complaint against Robinson and AAA in January 2023. According to the complaint, Robinson prepared and filed 2,629 federal income tax returns for clients through AAA from 2019 to 2021 and displayed a pattern of filing returns during this period that understated clients’ tax liabilities and overstated refunds by fabricating business losses, claiming false charitable donations or claiming undeserved education credits. On April 23, 2023, the court issued a default judgment of permanent injunction that barred Robinson and AAA from preparing returns for others.

The court recently found that she continued to prepare 227 returns for others. For these violations, the court held her in civil contempt and ordered that she disgorge $68,100 in fees she’d earned in violation of the injunction, as well as reimburse the U.S. its costs of litigation and travel.

Hurricane, West Virginia: Businessman Dean E. Dawson, 65, has pleaded guilty to one count of willful failure to pay over employment taxes.

He operated RPC Group, a real estate appraisal business. Dawson, responsible for withholding employment taxes from employees and paying over those funds to the IRS, failed to pay the money over between 2015 and 2022. He also used the RPC business accounts to pay personal expenses, including credit cards and his wife’s home mortgage, and issued checks to his wife from RPC even though she was not an employee.

From 2018 to 2023, Dawson also failed to file personal returns or pay income tax.

In total, he caused a tax loss to the IRS exceeding $250,000.

Sentencing is June 23. He faces up to five years in prison, up to three years of supervised release and a $250,000 fine, as well as restitution to be determined later.

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XcelLabs launches to help accountants use AI

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Jody Padar, an author and speaker known as “The Radical CPA,” and Katie Tolin, a growth strategist for CPAs, together launched a training and technology platform called XcelLabs.

XcelLabs provides solutions to help accountants use artificial technology fluently and strategically. The Pennsylvania Institute of CPAs and CPA Crossings joined with Padar and Tolin as strategic partners and investors.

“To reinvent the profession, we must start by training the professional who can then transform their firms,” Padar said in a statement. “By equipping people with data and insights that help them see things differently, they can provide better advice to their clients and firm.”

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Jody Padar

The platform includes XcelLabs Academy, a series of educational online courses on the basics of AI, being a better advisor, leadership and practice management; Navi, a proprietary tool that uses AI to help accountants turn unstructured data like emails, phone calls and meetings into insights; and training and consulting services. These offerings are currently in beta testing.

“Accountants know they need to be more advisory, but not everyone can figure out how to do it,” Tolin said in a statement. “Couple that with the fact that AI will be doing a lot of the lower-level work accountants do today, and we need to create that next level advisor now. By showing accountants how to unlock patterns in their actions and turn client conversations into emotionally intelligent advice, we can create the accounting professional of the future.”

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Katie Tolin

“AI is transforming how CPAs work, and XcelLabs is focused on helping the profession evolve with it,” PICPA CEO Jennifer Cryder said in a statement. “At PICPA, we’re proud to support a mission that aligns so closely with ours: empowering firms to use AI not just for efficiency, but to drive growth, value and long-term relevance.”

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Accounting is changing, and the world can’t wait until 2026

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The accountant the world urgently needs has evolved far beyond the traditional role we recognized just a few years ago. 

The transformation of the accounting profession is not merely an anticipated change; it is a pressing reality that is currently shaping business decisions, academic programs and the expected contributions of professionals. Yet, in many areas, accounting education stubbornly clings to outdated, overly technical models that fail to connect with the actual demands of the market. We must confront a critical question: If we continue to train accountants solely to file tax reports, are we truly equipping them for the challenges of today’s world? 

This shift in mindset extends beyond individual countries or educational systems; it is a global movement. The recent announcement of the CIMA/CGMA 2026 syllabus has made it unmistakably clear: merely knowing how to post journal entries is insufficient. Today’s accountants are required to interpret the landscape, anticipate risks and act with strategic awareness. Critical thinking, sustainable finance, technology and human behavior are not just supplementary topics; they are essential components in the education of any professional seeking to remain relevant. 

The CIMA/CGMA proposal for 2026 is not just a curriculum update; it is a powerful manifesto. This new program positions analytical thinking, strategic business partnering and technology application at the core of accounting education. It unequivocally highlights sustainability, aligning with IFRS S1 and S2, and expands the accountant’s responsibilities beyond mere numbers to encompass conscious leadership, environmental impact and corporate governance. 

The current changes in the accounting profession underscore an urgent shift in expectations from both educators and employers. Today, companies of all sizes and industries demand accountants who can do far more than interpret balance sheets. They expect professionals who grasp the deeper context behind the numbers, identify inconsistencies, anticipate potential issues before they escalate into losses, and act decisively as a bridge between data and decision making. 

To meet these expectations, a radical mindset shift is essential. There are firms still operating on autopilot, mindlessly repeating tasks with minimal critical analysis. Likewise, many academic programs continue to treat accounting as purely a technical discipline, disregarding the vital elements of reflection, strategy and behavioral insight. This outdated approach creates a significant mismatch. While the world forges ahead, parts of the accounting profession remain stuck in the past. 

The consequences of this shift are already becoming evident. The demand for compliance, transparency and sustainability now applies not only to large corporations but also to small and mid-sized businesses. Many of these organizations rely on professionals ill-equipped to drive the necessary changes, putting both business performance and the reputation of the profession at risk. 

The positive news is that accountants who are ready to thrive in this new era do not necessarily need additional degrees. What they truly need is a commitment to awareness, a dedication to continuous learning, and the courage to step beyond their comfort zones. The future of accounting is here, and it is firmly rooted in analytical, strategic and human-oriented perspectives. The 2026 curriculum is a clear indication of the changes underway. Those who fail to think critically and holistically will be left behind. 

In contrast, accountants who see the big picture, understand the ripple effects of their decisions, and actively contribute to the financial and ethical health of organizations will undeniably remain indispensable, anywhere in the world.

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Republicans push Musk aside as Trump tax bill barrels forward

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Congressional Republicans are siding with Donald Trump in the messy divorce between the president and Elon Musk, an optimistic sign for eventual passage of a tax cut bill at the root of the two billionaires’ public feud.

Lawmakers are largely taking their cues from Trump and sticking by the $3 trillion bill at the center of the White House’s economic agenda. Musk, the biggest political donor of the 2024 cycle, has threatened to help primary anyone who votes for the legislation, but lawmakers are betting that staying in the president’s good graces is the safer path to political survival.

“The tax bill is not in jeopardy. We are going to deliver on that,” House Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters on Friday.

“I’ll tell you what — do not doubt, don’t second guess and do not challenge the President of the United States Donald Trump,” he added. “He is the leader of the party. He’s the most consequential political figure of our time.”

A fight between Trump and Musk exploded into public view this week. The sparring started with the tech titan calling the president’s tax bill a “disgusting abomination,” but quickly escalated to more personal attacks and Trump threatening to cancel all federal contracts and subsidies to Musk’s companies, such as Tesla Inc. and SpaceX which have benefitted from government ties.

Republicans on Capitol Hill, who had —  until recently — publicly embraced Musk, said they weren’t swayed by the billionaire’s criticism that the bill cost too much. Lawmakers have refuted official estimates of the package, saying that the tax cuts for households, small businesses and politically important groups — including hospitality and hourly workers — will generate enough economic growth to offset the price tag.

“I don’t tell my friend Elon, I don’t argue with him about how to build rockets, and I wish he wouldn’t argue with me about how to craft legislation and pass it,” Johnson told CNBC earlier Friday.

House Budget Committee Chair Jodey Arrington told reporters that House lawmakers are focused on working with the Senate as it revises the bill to make sure the legislation has the political support in both chambers to make it to Trump’s desk for his signature. 

“We move past the drama and we get the substance of what is needed to make the modest improvements that can be made,” he said.

House fiscal hawks said that they hadn’t changed their prior positions on the legislation based on Musk’s statements. They also said they agree with GOP leaders that there will be other chances to make further spending cuts outside the tax bill. 

Representative Tom McClintock, a fiscal conservative, said “the bill will pass because it has to pass,” adding that both Musk and Trump needed to calm down. “They both need to take a nap,” he said.

Even some of the House bill’s most vociferous critics appeared resigned to its passage. Kentucky Representative Thomas Massie, who voted against the House version, predicted that despite Musk’s objections, the Senate will make only small changes.

“The speaker is right about one thing. This barely passed the House. If they muck with it too much in the Senate, it may not pass the House again,” he said.

Trump is pressuring lawmakers to move at breakneck speed to pass the tax-cut bill, demanding they vote on the bill before the July 4 holiday. The president has been quick to blast critics of the bill — including calling Senator Rand Paul “crazy” for objecting to the inclusion of a debt ceiling increase in the package.

As the legislation worked its way through the House last month, Trump took to social media to criticize holdouts and invited undecided members to the White House to compel them to support the package. It passed by one vote.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune — who is planning to unveil his chamber’s version of the bill as soon as next week — said his timeline is unmoved by Musk. 

“We are already pretty far down the trail,” he said.

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