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RENO - An
Atlanta businessman who conspired with Nevada author Lawrence Turpen
to defraud the IRS by transferring business income to offshore corporations,
pleaded guilty today in U.S. District Court to Conspiracy to Defraud
the United States, announced Eileen J. OConnor, Assistant Attorney
General for the U.S. Department of Justice Tax Division, Daniel
G. Bogden, United States Attorney for the District of Nevada, and
Nancy Jardini, Chief of IRS Criminal Investigation.
ROBERT F. HOLLIDAY, of Atlanta, Georgia, waived Indictment and pleaded
guilty to a single-count felony Criminal Information. He faces up
to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine, and is scheduled to
be sentenced on January 18, 2005, at 1:30 p.m. before United States
District Court Judge David W. Hagen
ROBERT HOLLIDAY admitted in his plea agreement that he sought assistance
from Reno resident and financial consultant Lawrence Turpen to illegally
evade the assessment and collection of his income taxes. Turpen
pleaded guilty in July to conspiring to defraud the IRS, and is
scheduled to be sentenced in Reno on October 18, 2004. HOLLIDAY
and Turpen set up Business Directions, Inc., a Nevada corporation,
and Landmark Planning, Ltd., an Isle of Man corporation, and disguised
the defendants interest in them through the use of nominee individuals
and resident agent services. HOLLIDAY and Turpen also conducted
sham transactions to move income to the untaxed offshore corporation
and to reduce or eliminate the corporate tax liabilities of the
Nevada corporation. Defendant HOLLIDAY provided false information
to his tax return preparer concerning Business Directions, Inc.,
and based in part upon this false information, false corporate income
tax returns were prepared for the tax years 1996 through 2002, resulting
in a total tax loss to the United States of more than $200,000.
Defendant HOLLIDAY also repatriated the untaxed money from his offshore
corporation through bogus loans.
"People who try to reduce or eliminate their tax liabilities
by hiding their income and assets from the IRS are on a sure path
to trouble," said Assistant Attorney General Eileen J. OConnor.
"They risk criminal prosecution by the Department of Justice
and a lengthy stay in federal prison. And they will still owe the
taxes, plus interest and penalties."
"The government will not tolerate abusive tax schemes that
promote the use of offshore accounts to illegally escape taxes,"
stated Nancy Jardini, Chief, IRS Criminal Investigation. "Tax
evasion is not a victimless crime. The honest, hardworking American
taxpayer pays the price for these scams against the government."
The cases are being investigated by IRS Criminal Investigation,
and prosecuted by U.S. Department of Justice Tax Division Trial
Attorneys Caryn D. Mark and Edmund P. Power.
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