If he is a genuine Khmer , with Khmer heart and soul practicing  the 5 sila 
buddhist dharma , this thing would not occur.
But cheating is a crime . 

 


Date: Fri, 8 Oct 2010 14:59:02 -0400
Subject: Re: Cambodian businessman in Rhode Island sentenced for fraud, tax 
evasion
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]


Thank you Lok Camdisc.
Thavary


On Fri, Oct 8, 2010 at 2:11 PM, In Camdisc <[email protected]> wrote:




Rhode Island businessman sentenced for fraud, tax evasion 

01:00 AM EDT on Friday, October 8, 2010
By Michael P. McKinney

Journal Staff Writer 

 
Chea
PROVIDENCE — A man who says he endured more than five years in a forced labor 
camp in Khmer Rouge-ruled Cambodia in the 1970s was sentenced Thursday in U.S. 
District Court to two years in prison and ordered to pay $14.3 million in 
workers’ taxes for the temporary employees his company supplied to businesses. 
  
Cheang Chea, 73, owner of S&P Temporary Help Service Inc. of Providence, which 
provided hundreds of temporary workers to about 30 Rhode Island companies, 
pleaded guilty in June to tax evasion, theft from a health-care benefit program 
and mail fraud over a period that began in 2003. 
  
And as he awaited sentencing, he continued business as usual, the U.S. 
Attorney’s office said Thursday. 
Prosecutors say that Chea has the means to pay the $14.3 million. 
  
Chief Judge Mary M. Lisi said she understood that he experienced “unspeakable 
horrors” in Cambodia and that he should be commended for having built a 
business after arriving as a refugee in the country with so little. But, she 
said, “I have before me a paradox”: a man who became a successful professional 
but cheated employees and the government on taxes. She said he and his family 
have done well, noting he has a Mercedes Benz. 
  
As Lisi imposed sentence, which includes a year of supervised release when Chea 
leaves prison, a woman began to cry uncontrollably. A man seated next to her in 
the federal courthouse on Kennedy Plaza picked her up and carried her from the 
courtroom. 
  
Chea, through a translator, expressed regrets, but recounted being surrounded 
by killing in Cambodia and constant fear for his life. 
Prosecutors said in court documents that Chea, based on a report submitted by 
the defense, has recently been diagnosed with posttraumatic stress syndrome and 
depression, and a prison sentence would afford him the opportunity to get 
treatment. 
Assistant U.S. Attorney Dulce Donovan asked the judge to impose a 46-month 
sentence, at the low end of the pre-sentencing guidelines of 46 to 57 months. 
Along with ordering payment of the $14.3 million in withholding, Social 
Security and Medicare taxes, the prosecution wanted a $75,000 fine imposed. 
Donovan said the company under-reported to the government a substantial amount 
of the wages paid to the temporary workers. 

  
Donovan said the prosecution believes the businesses Chea sent workers to paid 
people off the books and below minimum wage. Court documents said that Chea 
paid workers $200 in cash for a 40-hour work week or $5 an hour. The U.S. 
Attorney’s office said that the people Chea placed in temporary jobs were 
mostly East Asian and non-English speaking workers. 
  
Defense lawyer Geoffrey Nathan said in court Thursday that Chea paid his 
workers the federal minimum wage. Court documents say the minimum was $7.40 for 
the period of Chea’s tax evasion. 
  
S&P Temporary Help Service, in supplying workers to the companies, said it 
would be responsible for all payroll withholding. The companies would send S&P 
a check to cover what it charged for the workers. Chea would pay the workers. 
  
While the prosecution acknowledged Chea’s trauma in Cambodia, Donovan said, he 
“is not someone who stands before this court claiming to not understand what 
his obligations are.” Rather, he decided “to pick and choose” how much money to 
report to the federal government and has “reaped the benefits” for his family. 
  
Chea was reportedly known in the Asian immigrant community as a generous man 
who donated money to local Buddhist temples and to help build a hospital in 
Cambodia. 
  
“He was helping rebuild Cambodia in what he’s doing, and helping people get 
jobs,” Molly Soum, former president of the Cambodian Society of Rhode Island, 
said in June after Chea’s plea agreement with federal prosecutors. The 
agreement rules out any appeal of Thursday’s sentence. 
  
Court documents said, between 2003 and 2007, Chea deposited more than $996,000 
into the bank accounts of relatives from his business and personal accounts. 
 
Nathan said he has received countless letters in support of his client, and 
that Chea has said he wants to pay the money owed to the government.



























































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