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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 2004 WWW.USDOJ.GOV |
TAX (202) 514-2008 TDD (202) 514-1888 |
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FEDERAL COURT HALTS TAX SCAM INVOLVING SHAM TRUSTS Promoter Ordered to Give Customer List to Justice Department WASHINGTON, D.C. - The Justice Department today announced that a federal court has granted a preliminary injunction ordering Tacoma, Washington resident David Carroll Stephenson to stop promoting a tax scam in which customers paid $2,500 to $8,000 to use sham trusts and corporations to evade federal income taxes. The court found that Stephenson, to promote the scheme, falsely claimed to be a lawyer. Also barred by the court order are several businesses operated by Stephenson: American Business Estate & Tax Planning Service; Advocate and Associates, Inc.; Advocate NW & Co., Inc.; A-1 Credit & Co.; the American Business Law, Inc. and American Business & Estate Planning. Today’s court order states that Stephenson’s promotion has cost the federal treasury more than $43 million in lost tax revenue. The court order also states that Stephenson’s customers have suffered substantial harm, “as they too are in violation of internal revenue laws.” “This spring, as millions of Americans engage in the annual ritual of complying with the tax laws, some people are cynically helping others to evade them,” said Eileen J. O’Connor, Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Tax Division. “The Department of Justice is working to halt the promotion of tax fraud schemes and to help the IRS identify those who use them.” The court found that the defendants have promoted an abusive tax scheme that assists customers in evading federal tax liabilities and IRS collection efforts through the fraudulent use of trusts and business entities. The court found that defendants instruct customers to transfer their personal assets into four different trusts, each intended to perform a unique function within the scheme, with the ultimate goal of evading taxes on income and wages and hiding assets from IRS collection efforts. The court also referred to numerous misrepresentations and false claims made by Stephenson in marketing his tax schemes, such as:
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