Waterville Woman Sentenced to 15 Months on Immigration, Money Laundering and Tax Charges

Waterville Woman Sentenced to 15 Months on Immigration, Money Laundering and Tax Charges

The following press release was published by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the United States Attorneys on July 1, 2014. It is reproduced in full below.

Bangor, Maine: United States Attorney Thomas E. Delahanty II announced that Mei Ya

Zhang, 29, of Waterville, Maine, was sentenced today in U.S. District Court by Chief Judge

John A. Woodcock, Jr. to 15 months in prison to be followed by 3 years of supervised release for

harboring undocumented aliens for commercial advantage and private financial gain, money

laundering conspiracy, and conspiracy to file false employer's quarterly federal tax returns. She

was also ordered to pay more than $88,000 in restitution to the Internal Revenue Service

(IRS). Zhang pled guilty to the charges on June 5, 2013.

According to court records, between 2006 and 2011, the defendant was the manager of

the Twin Super Buffet, located on State Street in Brewer, Maine. In that capacity, she managed

a Chinese buffet restaurant that brought undocumented aliens into Maine to work, had them

work six days per week, eight to 10.5 hours per day, housed them in squalid conditions at a

residence on Elm Street in Brewer, transported them back and forth each day to work, paid them

under the table with cash generated illegally by the employment of undocumented aliens, and

filed numerous false quarterly employment tax returns in which the undocumented aliens were

not disclosed and employment taxes were not properly withheld or paid. The investigation

revealed that about half of the employees at the buffet over that period were undocumented, and

that the defendant’s activities concealed about $400,000 in wages and thwarted the collection of

about $88,000 in employment taxes.

In imposing sentence, Chief Judge Woodcock noted that a primary obligation of

citizenship is to obey the law. In this case, over a five year period, the defendant illegally hired

undocumented aliens and paid them in cash under the table even after telling federal agents that

she had stopped doing so. As a result, she unfairly competed with legitimate restaurants that

paid their employees fair wages and that properly withheld and remitted employment taxes to the

government.

The investigation was conducted by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s

Homeland Security Investigations; IRS-Criminal Investigation; and the U.S. Department of

Labor, Office of Inspector General, Office of Labor Racketeering & Fraud Investigations; with

assistance from the Brewer Police Department.

Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the United States Attorneys

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