Connect with us

Accounting

Tax Fraud Blotter: Incorrect positions

Published

on

On ice; the end of the beginning; Speed trap; and other highlights of recent tax cases.

Miami: A federal court has issued a permanent injunction against tax preparer Richard Louis that bars him from preparing federal income tax returns, working for or having any ownership stake in a tax prep business, assisting others (including family members) prepare returns or setting up business as a preparer and transferring or assigning customer lists to any other person or entity. 

In June, the court enjoined seven independent contractors who worked with Louis — Harold Bornelous, Romeo Davis, Teddy Davis, Joseph Garrett, Demetrius Knowles, Daniel Oku and Marlyne Wah — from preparing returns for others but allowed them to apply for reinstatement after two years if they successfully complete the IRS Annual Filing Season Program. The contractors agreed to the injunctions.

The complaint alleged that Louis and the seven contractors prepared returns that claimed various false or fabricated deductions and credits, including fabricated residential energy credits, false and exaggerated itemized deductions, and fictitious and inflated business expenses. According to the complaint, Louis marketed himself as Taxman and he with the seven contractors prepared thousands of returns for clients over the past 10 years.

The court also ordered Louis to disgorge $390,000 from the scam that he’d received from his prep business. He agreed to both the injunction and the disgorgement.

Moon Township, Pennsylvania: Business owner Albert Boyd Jr. has pleaded guilty to willfully filing a false return.

For each year from 2017 to 2022, Boyd failed to report income from his company, Boyd Roll-Off Services, on the business return, causing a total tax loss of at least $1,030,000.

Boyd ensured that much of the company’s income from the sale of scrap metal went unreported by causing cash proceeds not to be deposited in the business bank account and causing checks to be deposited into accounts other than the business bank account. Boyd then failed to provide his tax preparer with records relating to the undeposited cash and diverted checks.

Sentencing is Dec. 17. He faces up to three years in prison and a fine. 

Des Moines, Iowa: Businessman Mark Francis Davidson, 66, formerly of Adel, Iowa, has been sentenced to 18 months in prison for filing a false income tax return.

Davidson is the majority shareholder of Collegiate Concepts Inc., which rents dorm minifridges to colleges and college students. From 2015 to 2021, Davidson diverted more than $3.8 million from the corporation to himself and failed to report this income to the IRS. Davidson concealed these payments from the corporation’s accountant and tax preparer by providing check ledgers that falsely identified checks from the corporation to Davidson as legitimate business expenses.

After his imprisonment, Davidson will be on supervised release for a year. He was also ordered to pay $1,449,620 in restitution to the IRS and a fine of $20,000.

Frankfort, Illinois: Jeremiah Johnson, owner of three local childcare and transportation businesses, has been sentenced to a year and a day in prison for underreporting more than $1.47 million in income.

Johnson owned New Beginnings Academy, New Beginnings Child Development and Epic Transportation. From 2015 to 2020, he obtained more than $1.47 million of income from the operation of those businesses but failed to report the money on his individual returns, instead reporting lesser W-2 wages and some rental income.

During the same period, Johnson also failed to file corporate returns or pay any of the required employer and employee withholdings for federal income tax, Social Security tax and Medicare.

Johnson, who pleaded guilty earlier this year, was also fined $10,000 and ordered to pay $123,391 in restitution to the IRS.

Hands-in-jail-Blotter

Wilmington, North Carolina: Businessman George William Taylor Jr. has pleaded guilty to not paying more than $2 million in employment taxes and not filing employment tax returns.

Taylor owned and operated National Speed, a service business for high-speed automobiles. He was responsible for withholding Social Security, Medicare and income taxes from employees’ wages and paying those taxes to the IRS. From 2014 through 2021, Taylor withheld the taxes but did not pay those withholdings over to the IRS, nor did he file the necessary employment returns. During the same period, he also did not pay the employer’s share of those taxes to the IRS.

In total, Taylor caused a federal tax loss of $2,272,072.

Sentencing is Nov. 19. Taylor faces up to five years in prison, as well as a period of supervised release, restitution and monetary penalties. 

Cincinnati: A U.S. district court has issued a permanent injunction against tax preparer Emmanuel Antwi and his businesses.

Antwi and his businesses, Manny Travel Agency & Business Services Inc. and Manny Financial, Insurance & Accounting Firm LLC, consented to the injunction, which permanently bars them from preparing federal returns for others. The United States’ claim demanding that Antwi turn over ill-gotten gains he received in tax prep fees remains pending.

According to the civil complaint, since at least 2020 Antwi filed hundreds of returns each filing season with at least 95% of the returns claiming a refund. Allegedly, Antwi knowingly took unreasonable or incorrect positions on returns he prepared that resulted in understatements of the tax that his clients owed and overstatements of refunds.

In particular, the complaint alleges that Antwi prepared returns that claimed deductions for purported business losses or employee business expenses that he knew were false. The complaint also alleges that Antwi prepared returns where he knowingly reported the wrong filing status.

Antwi must send notice of the injunction to each person for whom he or his businesses prepared federal returns, amended returns or claims for refund after Jan. 1, 2019. He must also post a copy of the injunction both on websites that he and his businesses maintain and at physical locations where any business is conducted.

Newnan, Georgia: Business owner Barry Lee White, of Carrollton, Georgia, has been sentenced to 22 months in prison to be followed by three years of supervised release for willful failure to pay more than $2.4 million in payroll taxes.

Between 2012 and 2019, White owned and operated, at different times, two construction maintenance and electrical companies that were required to withhold from employees’ gross pay FICA taxes and as sole operator of the companies, White had the responsibility to collect, truthfully account for, and pay the IRS the payroll taxes.

From at least 2015 to 2018, White withheld more than $1.8 million in payroll taxes from his employees but failed to pay the taxes to the IRS and failed to pay more than $600,000 for the employer’s portion of the payroll taxes.

Convicted of the charges in May after pleading guilty, White was also ordered to pay $2,499,473.07 in restitution.

Continue Reading

Accounting

RSM announces $1 billion agentic AI investment

Published

on

Top 10 firm RSM announced a $1 billion technology investment over the next three years to expand its AI strategy and offerings, particularly where it concerns semi-autonomous agents. 

“AI continues to be a strategic imperative for RSM, and our significant investment enables us to move decisively from exploration to execution, driving real outcomes for our people and our clients through responsible, business-led solutions,” said Brian Becker, managing partner and CEO with RSM US LLP. “We’re not simply adopting new technologies—we’re transforming how we deliver value, combining deeper insights, greater agility and an unwavering focus on quality and impact.” 

Specifically, the investment will be devoted towards integrating agentic AI platforms across RSM’s operations and services. More specifically, it will involve developing and investing in industry-specific AI tools and talent, and pursuing strategic ventures to build scalable AI frameworks and infrastructure; fully integrating agentic AI into RSM’s assurance, tax and consulting services; empowering RSM talent with agentic AI tools to heighten productivity and professional growth; and expanding agentic AI-driven solutions throughout the client lifecycle to elevate the overall client experience.

This is part of RSM’s overall agentic AI strategy, which centers on developing “AI flows,” described as purpose-built workflows that enable RSM professionals to leverage and optimize AI agents and generative AI capabilities. These AI flows are meant to seamlessly integrate into existing workflows. 

“RSM is leading the charge in digital transformation, and agentic AI is central to our strategy,” said Sergio de la Fe, enterprise digital leader and partner with RSM US LLP. “Our $1 billion investment is fueling groundbreaking innovation to empower our talent and clients to achieve unprecedented performance. This commitment to our digital first strategy reflects a sustained journey that will continue to evolve well beyond this initial investment as we drive market-leading solutions and redefine how the middle market navigates the future.”

The news comes as large firms announce their intention to make major investments in AI technology, especially agents. Just a few weeks ago, for example, BDO, another top 10 firm, announced its own plans to invest $1 billion in AI solutions. The initiative, which will take place over five years, will involve weaving AI assistants throughout its different service lines, among other things. 

Continue Reading

Accounting

Johnson urges Senate to minimize changes to $40K SALT deal

Published

on

House Speaker Mike Johnson said he’s pressuring Senate Republicans to refrain from changing a deal to increase the state and local tax deduction cap to $40,000, pushing back on President Donald Trump’s willingness to scale back the write-off.

“I’ve asked them to modify it as little as possible because I’ve got a very delicate balance there,” Johnson told reporters at the White House on Monday.

“The reality is that we have a very diverse conference,” Johnson added, noting that he has several members who represent high-tax areas in New York, New Jersey and California. “This is a very important thing for their constituents.”

Johnson is seeking to preserve a deal he struck with those members last month to increase the SALT cap to $40,000, up from $10,000 in current law. That plan was critical to passing Trump’s tax bill out of the House last month.

But as the Senate has begun negotiating the legislation, SALT has fallen off the agenda as a priority issue. No Republican senator hails from a state where SALT is a big political issue.

Trump last week told Senate Republicans he is open to a state and local tax deduction cap lower than the $40,000 in the House-passed version of his giant tax bill. 

Several House Republicans have threatened to block the legislation if the Senate waters down the SALT write-off, setting up high-stakes negotiations between the two chambers as they look to meet a self-imposed July 4 deadline to pass the bill.

Some Senate Republicans are also pressing to pare the bill’s price tag, while other factions are looking to scale back House-passed changes to Medicaid and phase out some green energy credits more slowly.

“We’re going to get it done by Independence Day,” Johnson said. “It’s going to be a great celebration.”

Continue Reading

Accounting

AICPA, NASBA recognize top CPA exam performers

Published

on

Eleven accountants were given the Elijah Watt Sells Award by the American Institute of CPAs and the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy.

The award is granted to candidates who earned a cumulative average score above 95.50 across four sections of the CPA Exam, pass the four sections on their first attempt and have completed testing in 2024. More than 74,000 individuals sat for the exam last year, meaning 0.01% of test takers reached this criteria.

“The Elijah Watt Sells Award represents one of the highest honors in the CPA profession, and this year’s 11 recipients have demonstrated extraordinary commitment, intellect, and discipline in earning it,” Susan Coffey, CEO of public accounting at the AICPA, said in a statement. “These individuals are not only technically exceptional, they are also poised to shape the future of our profession. As the accounting landscape evolves, their leadership, integrity, and drive for excellence will play a vital role in upholding public trust and guiding businesses through complexity and change.”

AICPA building in Durham, N.C.

The Elijah Watt Sells Award program was established by the AICPA in 1923 to recognize outstanding performance on the CPA exam, as well as to honor Sells. Sells was one of the country’s first CPAs and a founding member of the Big Four Firm now known as Deloitte. Sells played a role in the establishment of the AICPA and has helped advance education within the profession.

The individuals listed below are the 2024 Sells Award winners in alphabetical order:

Name Board of Accountancy Affiliation Education Present Employer
Samuel Abram Arkansas and Texas Graduate of the University of Arkansas with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration in accounting and information systems KPMG in Dallas
Ujjwal Ahluwalia Montana Graduate of the University of Delhi with a Bachelor of Commerce (Honors), and a Chartered Accountant from The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India American Express in Gurugram, India
David Samayoa Alvarado New York Graduate of Ramapo College of New Jersey with a Bachelor of Science in accounting and a Bachelor of Science in finance PwC in New York
Matthew DiMillo Illinois Graduate of Illinois Wesleyan University with a Bachelor of Science in accounting Mowery & Schoenfeld in Lincolnshire, Illinois
Esther Drillick New York Graduate of Touro University with a Bachelor of Science in accounting YVY ECC in Brooklyn, New York
Priyanka Goyal Washington Graduate of Meerut University with a Bachelor of Law and a Chartered Accountant from The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India Previously worked with S. C. Johnson & Son and is currently actively pursuing professional opportunities in the U.S. accounting and finance industry
Lucas Heilman Kentucky Graduate of the University of Kentucky with a Bachelor of Science in accounting and a Bachelor of Business Administration in finance Dean Dorton in Lexington, Kentucky
Sierra Rose Overmoyer Pennsylvania Graduate of Shippensburg University with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration in accounting and finance SEK CPAs & Advisors in Carlisle, Pennsylvania
Mac Smigielski Illinois Graduate of the University of Nebraska – Lincoln with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration in accounting and finance Deloitte & Touche LLP in Chicago
Xuan Phuc Tran California Graduate of the University of California, Irvine with a Bachelor of Arts in Business Administration PwC in San Jose, California
Kotaro Yoshioka Yoshioka has applied for his CPA licensure in the U.S. territory of Guam and is awaiting approval Graduate of The University of Tokyo with a Bachelor of Arts and a graduate of The University of Edinburgh with a Master of Business Administration JPMorgan in Tokyo

Continue Reading

Trending