German A. Posada was sentenced to 18 months in prison following a guilty plea to charges of filing a false 2004 individual income tax return and making a false statement in a bankruptcy proceeding, the Justice Department and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) announced today.
According to court documents and statements made in court, Posada admitted to filing a false individual income tax return for 2004 that under-reported the income from his business as a real estate agent in the Las Vegas area. Between 2003 and 2005, Posada earned commission income from International Realty and another realtor. He asked that International Realty issue some of his commission checks in the name of his then-girlfriend, and deposited those checks into a bank account in her name. Posada also admitted under-reporting his business income on his 2003 Form 1040 and failing to file a timely 2005 Form 1040, despite knowing of his legal duty to report the approximately $557,212 in income that he received in 2005.
Court records establish that, in 2005, Posada filed for bankruptcy in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Nevada. In his May 13, 2005, bankruptcy petition, and again in his Aug. 2, 2005, amended petition, he made false statements, including that he had no current income, he had received no income during the two years immediately preceding 2005, and 17 creditors held unsecured non-priority claims totaling $466,885 against him. Then, on Sept. 2, 2005, at a meeting of creditors, Posada falsely testified under oath before the bankruptcy trustee that he had received “one or two” and “probably two” commissions since May 13, 2005, when in fact he knew that he had received at least 19 commission checks totaling $130,575 during that time period.
Posada was also ordered to pay $212,016 in restitution to the IRS, and to pay $ $24,628 in restitution to victims of the bankruptcy fraud.
Special agents from IRS - Criminal Investigation investigated the case and Trial Attorneys John P. Scully and Thomas W. Flynn of the Justice Department’s Tax Division prosecuted the case.
More information about the Tax Division and its enforcement efforts can be found at www.justice.gov/tax.
Source: US Department of Justice