Rogue advisors on parade

Commentary June 24, 2008 at 08:00 PM
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A federal jury convicted six men in a $60 million tax scam that peddled phony trusts through a Chicago firm to nearly 700 wealthy clients. The advisors were convicted of diverting income from businesses into sham trusts, hiding millions of dollars of income and producing a $60 million tax-revenue loss to the U.S. government. The May 2008 convictions join more than 30 other convictions relating to the so-called "abusive trust" scheme. The felons will be sentenced in August and September.

A Kentucky financial planner got 37 months in prison for conspiracy and tax fraud relating to an off-shore insurance fraud. The planner operated an insurance agency that conspired with an insurance company in the U.S. Virgin Islands to sell phony "loss of income" insurance. The "policies" were sold as a tax-deductible vehicle that would return nearly 85 percent of the premium paid through a supposedly non-taxable offshore loan or investment.

A California resident was sentenced to 14 years in prison for grand theft, forgery, tax evasion and transacting insurance without a license. The convicted resident created a bogus insurance company that sold medical malpractice insurance to medical personnel through California and other states. The government said the individual operated the company without state certification, issued fraudulent documents, and failed to file tax returns. The "agent" used the millions of dollars generated to purchase fine art and 32 acres of prime California real estate.

Harry Lew is the Communications and Content Director for the National Ethics Bureau. He can be reached at [email protected].

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