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A Busy Week for the U.S. in Its Pursuit of Tax Rebels

November 9, 2002
By DAVID CAY JOHNSTON






The Justice Department this week moved on several fronts
against tax evasion and the promotion of evasion schemes.
Such moves had become so rare in recent years that
promoters boasted about not paying taxes and won clients
with claims that the government's not coming after them
proved that taxes are voluntary.

The most significant development came in Las Vegas, where
an eight-year prison sentence was imposed on Max C. Tanner,
55, a former Internal Revenue Service lawyer who evaded $2
million in taxes on profits from a stock swindle. Mr.
Tanner, who was taken directly to prison, was also fined
$3.2 million and ordered to forfeit $1.2 million in assets.
Mark Lytle, the federal prosecutor, called it "a
significant sentence for a white-collar crime."

Mr. Tanner ran a scheme out of the Empire State Building to
sell 1.8 million shares of stock, at up to $9.37 a share,
in Maid Aide, which turned out to be a one-woman cleaning
service in Las Vegas. He funneled the money through Canada
to the Cayman Islands to evade all taxes.

Mr. Tanner asserted that despite his work for the I.R.S.,
he sincerely believed that he was not required to pay
taxes. A jury rejected that defense a year ago, and Mr.
Tanner told Judge Kent Dawson in Federal District Court
yesterday that he suffered from an emotional disorder,
mitigating his responsibility for the crimes.

The Justice Department also sought injunctions against
promoters of tax evasion schemes in Tampa, Fla.; Newark and
Nashville and moved closer to obtaining such injunctions in
Cincinnati and Harrisburg, Pa. In Denver, a federal grand
jury handed up indictments for selling tax evasion schemes
against three men, one of whose clients has already been
sentenced to prison for tax evasion.

Of the five civil injunction cases, the most significant
was filed in Tampa against Carel A. (Chad) Prater of
Nokomis, Fla.; an associate, Richard W. Cantwell; and his
many businesses, including Goldcoast Enterprises, Tax
Escape Service and Family Values International. Clients
paid Mr. Prater as much as $20,000 for advice on how to not
owe taxes, advice the Justice Department said was
"worthless, even harmful" and had cost the government at
least $18 million in taxes.

Mr. Prater, 64, has contracts with at least 956 clients to
pay him $3.6 million, the suit filed in Federal District
Court in Tampa said, citing documents obtained in a March 7
raid by I.R.S. agents. His contracts are based on the 861
position, named after a tax code section; the claim is that
most Americans do not owe tax unless they work for
foreign-owned companies.

Mr. Prater uses the title "doctor," but acknowledged under
oath this year that he had not received a doctoral degree
for his studies of the movements of golfers, as he had
claimed. He has a long criminal history, according to The
Ledger, a Lakeland, Fla., newspaper that said public
records show convictions since 1983 for possession of
cocaine for sale, insurance fraud, credit card fraud,
violation of probation and domestic violence. An associate
of Mr. Prater said he had no comment.

Mr. Prater has also worked closely with David Bosset of
Clearwater, Fla., whom the same federal court has already
ordered to stop promoting similar schemes. Mr. Bosset
sought clients by displaying a $21,916 I.R.S. refund of
taxes that he had withheld from his employee paychecks. In
an interview, however, Mr. Bosset said that he did not
return this money to his workers, but instead pocketed it.
The I.R.S. said it issued the refund by mistake.

Part of the Prater scheme, the Justice Department said, was
filing documents with county clerks that purportedly
eliminate tax obligations. In Sarasota, Fla., at least
1,295 such affidavits have been filed.

Karen E. Rushing, the clerk of the state circuit court in
Sarasota, said that she was aware that the filings were
used to promote tax evasion, but said that "for the most
part Florida clerks have no authority to refuse anything"
presented for filing. Ms. Rushing said that she had not
sought a legal opinion on whether she could refuse to file
the Prater affidavits and that she did not intend to raise
the issue with the Florida Legislature.

In Newark, the Justice Department sought a federal court
injunction on Thursday against Richard Haraka, a Clifton,
N.J., resident who owns the Taxgate.com Web site. The
department contends Mr. Harakas has been interfering with
enforcement of the federal tax laws and promoting the 861
position. Mr. Haraka did not respond to an e-mail message
requesting comment.

The government filed suit earlier against Thurston P. Bell,
who uses that Web site to promote his version of the 861
position. In Harrisburg, Pa., on Tuesday, a federal judge
again delayed the government's request for an injunction to
stop him and retrieve his client lists.

In Denver, a federal grand jury indicted three men on
Tuesday on charges involving what the government says is an
offshore tax evasion scheme that hid $9 million in taxable
income. Paul D. Harris and Lester R. Retherford, both of
Colorado, and Robert N. Bedford of Florida, operating
through Tower Executive Resources, charged a $50,000 fee to
small-business owners to set up shell companies in the
Turks and Caicos Islands intended to evade taxes, the
indictment said. Efforts to contact the three men were
unsuccessful.

One client, John Mikutowicz, 51, of Mashpee, Mass., the
owner of AGM Marine Inc., which builds piers and bridges in
New England, has been convicted of tax evasion and false
filing. In September, he was sentenced to a year and a day
in prison, but is contesting the sentence.

In Cincinnati, a federal magistrate on Thursday recommended
that a district judge issue an injunction barring Robert
Welti, a certified public accountant in Ripley, Ohio, from
preparing tax returns citing the 861 position or using
abusive trust schemes. Mr. Welti charged $2,400 for each
tax return using bogus trusts in Belize, at a total cost to
the government of $3 million, the Justice Department said
in court papers. Mr. Welti did not respond to a message
left at his home.

In Nashville, the Justice Department sought an injunction
to stop Thomas Edward Settles, a lawyer from Murfreesboro,
Tenn., from "creating multiple sham entities" for clients
to evade taxes. Mr. Settles did not respond to messages at
his office.

The Justice Department has not made any move against four
leading advocates of the 861 position who boast about not
paying taxes. Larken Rose, a Philadelphia medical
transcriptionist, has dared the Justice Department to
indict him for not paying taxes since 1997. Two California
businessmen - Al Thompson, owner of Cencal Aviation in Lake
Shasta, and Nick Jesson, owner of N.T.D. Electronics in
Huntington Beach - who do not withhold taxes from their
workers' paychecks, say that the government does not act
against them for fear of exposing the tax laws as a hoax.
Dick Simkanin, owner of Arrow Customs Plastics in Bedford,
Tex., who also does not withhold, sued Attorney General
John Ashcroft last year and vowed to destroy with fire any
government officials who move against him.

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/11/09/business/09TAX.html?ex=1037852760&ei=1&en=66d134de04522723



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