D O J Seal
U.S. Department of Justice


United States Attorney James T. Jacks
Northern District of Texas

 

 

 
 

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MEDIA INQUIRIES: KATHY COLVIN

FRIDAY, JUNE 18, 2010
http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/txn/

 

 

PHONE: (214)659-8600

 

 

OWNER OF “TWIN TAX” - A TAX PREPARATION BUSINESS IN DALLAS -
SENTENCED TO NEARLY SIX YEARS IN FEDERAL PRISON

Anthony U. Barber Admitted Causing an Approximate
$5 Million Tax Loss to the U.S
.


DALLAS
— U.S. Attorney James T. Jacks, of the Northern District of Texas, announced that Anthony U. Barber was sentenced this morning by Chief U.S. District Judge Sidney A. Fitzwater to 70 months in prison, following his guilty plea in March 2010 to an information charging aiding or assisting in the preparation and presentation of a false and fraudulent return, and making a false statement on an income tax return. Barber, according to the factual resume filed in the case, is a Plano, Texas, resident and owned and operated “Twin Tax,” a tax preparation business in Dallas. Judge Fitzwater ordered that Barber must surrender to the Bureau of Prisons by August 3, 2010.

According to the plea agreement, Barber’s two offenses resulted in a total tax loss to the U.S. of $4,806,366.12. As of the date of the plea, $3,500,680.50 of that amount had been recovered from affected taxpayers. The parties agree that restitution to the IRS is appropriate, and that amount should be reduced by any amounts the IRS has collected from affected taxpayers.

According to the factual resume, Barber, who operated Twin Tax from 2001 through at least April 15, 2004, acted as a paid income tax return preparer for individuals who came to Twin Tax to have their personal income tax returns prepared. Twin Tax was authorized to file tax returns electronically. During this time frame, Barber admitted assisting in the preparation of approximately 7461 tax returns.

Barber personally met with clients and prepared their tax returns based on information that he received in those face-to-face meetings. During the meetings, Barber would add additional deductions, usually false and inflated itemized Schedule A deductions; false Schedule C business losses and credits; and generally false Hope Education Credits, to clients’ tax returns. After the clients left his office, Barber would increase these additional false and inflated deductions and credits, without the clients’ knowledge. He would also increase the return preparation fee that Twin Tax charged, again, without the knowledge of the client. When the refund was paid, Twin Tax would retain the difference.

Barber had at least three full-time employees, including Luciano Martinez and Ramon Perez, both charged in separate indictments. The factual resume further states that at Barber’s direction, these three employees would place the same types of false deductions on clients’ tax returns and he further instructed them to limit the clients’ Schedule C losses to less than $10,000 and false Hope Education Credits to less than $3000. After Martinez and Perez prepared the clients’ tax returns, Barber would adjust the returns by increasing these already false and inflated credits, thereby increasing the refund. Barber would also increase the return preparation fee by a corresponding amount.

Ramon Perez pleaded guilty in November 2009 to one count of aiding and assisting in the preparation and presentation of a false and fraudulent return. According to plea documents filed in that case, Perez, a resident of Allen, Texas, admitted assisting in the preparation of at least seven false and fraudulent U.S. Individual Tax Returns for the tax year 2003, while he worked at Twin Tax. Perez faces a maximum statutory sentence of three years in prison, a $250,000 fine and restitution. He is scheduled to be sentenced on September 9, 2010.

Martinez is charged in a 10-count superseding indictment with eight counts of aiding and assisting in the preparation and presentation of a false and fraudulent return or document, one count of making and subscribing a false document, and one count of corruptly endeavoring to obstruct and imped the due administration of the Internal Revenue laws. A trial date of July 20, 2010, has been set for Martinez. An indictment is an accusation by a federal grand jury and a defendant is entitled to the presumption of innocence unless proven guilty.

In June 2007, in a civil case styled, U.S. v. Tax Works Inter-National, Inc., et al., 3:06-CV1536-L, Tax Works Inter-National, d/b/a Twin Tax Service, Inc., and Ramon Perez, as well as others, were permanently enjoined from operating as tax preparers. The complaint filed in that case notes that Ramon Perez is a resident of Allen, Texas, and that Twin Tax was located on Walnut Hill Lane in Dallas. The complaint alleged that the defendants improperly reduced their clients’ reported tax liabilities by claiming improper and illegal deductions. They were advised
by the IRS that the returns they prepared contained improper and illegal deductions, but they refused to stop preparing improper income tax returns. That complaint notes that for returns prepared for tax years 2002-2004, it is estimated that the tax loss was more than $1.4 million.

Barber also admitted in plea papers that he failed to file an accurate personal tax return for tax year 2003, by willfully failing to report approximately $1,083,417 in business income from Twin Tax. As a result, Barber had a tax due and owing of at least $103,220. In addition, Barber admitted that he failed to file a personal tax return for tax year 2004, failing to report approximately $1,083,417 in wages from Twin Tax, which resulted in a tax due and owing for tax year 2004 of at least $354,733. Barber also admitted that in February 2006, he filed an IRS Form 1120, U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return, for Twin Tax for tax year 2004 that showed a tax due and owing of $722,669, however, no tax payment was remitted.

The case is being investigated by the IRS - Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI) and prosecuted by U.S. Department of Justice Tax Division Trial Attorneys Robert A. Kemins and Jed M. Silversmith and Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph Revesz of the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Dallas.



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