Los Angeles Resident is Second Individual Charged with Conspiring with Bankers to Hide Secret Israeli Bank Accounts
Guity Kashfi of Los Angeles, was charged today in the U.S. District
Court for the Central District of California with conspiracy to defraud
the United States, the Justice Department and Internal Revenue Service,
Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI) announced. A signed plea agreement was
filed along with the charging document.
According to court documents, Kashfi, a U.S. citizen, maintained
undeclared bank accounts at an international bank headquartered in Tel
Aviv, Israel. The accounts were held in the names of nominees in order
to keep them secret from the United States government. Kashfi used the
accounts to obtain “back-to-back” loans from a branch of the bank in Los
Angeles. Although the loans were secured or collateralized with
certificates of deposit held in Kashfi’s undeclared offshore accounts,
that fact was concealed to keep Kashfi’s offshore accounts secret.
According to the plea agreement, in 2008, Kashfi
was told by a banker in Los Angeles that the bank was going to use the
funds in her account in Israel to pay off her back-to-back loans in Los
Angeles.
Rather than pay off the loans, Kashfi transferred approximately
$2 million to an account located in Luxembourg at a branch of a second
Israeli bank. Kashfi did this to avoid repatriating funds from her first
Israeli account back to the United States to pay back her loans in Los
Angeles.
Kashfi eventually used the funds in Luxembourg to obtain a new
back-to-back loan from a branch of the second Israeli bank located in
Los Angeles. In 2009, Kashfi went to Luxembourg to close her account.
While there, two foreign bankers advised Kashfi that her money was safe
in Luxembourg because the bank was a private bank and no one could get
information relating to bank accounts located in Luxembourg. In 2011,
Kashfi closed all her accounts in Luxembourg by signing paperwork in Los
Angeles. She then transferred the funds to banks in the United States.
According to the plea agreement, Kashfi never told her accountant about
her undeclared accounts, and failed to report any income from the
accounts on her individual income tax returns that were filed with the
IRS. For tax years 2005 through 2011, Kashfi failed to report interest
income of approximately $221,306.
The highest balance in Kashfi’s undeclared accounts was approximately $2,501,469.
Kashfi is the second defendant charged in the U.S. District Court for
the Central District of California with failing to report income from
undeclared accounts in Israel.
On March 29, 2013, Zvi Sperling of Beverly Hills, Calif., appearing
before United States District Judge John F. Walter, pleaded guilty to
conspiring to defraud the United States in connection with back-to-back
loans obtained in Los Angeles that were secured by funds in undeclared
bank accounts in Israel. For tax years 2005 through 2008, Sperling
failed to report income of approximately $381,563. The highest balance
in Sperling’s undeclared accounts was approximately $4 million.
“Today’s guilty plea is a stark reminder that those who attempt to hide
their income and assets from the United States are running out of places
to hide,” said Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s
Tax Division Kathryn Keneally. “The Internal Revenue Service will find
the hiding places and the Department of Justice will criminally
prosecute the tax cheats. And in the end, they will still owe and be
required to pay the taxes due.”
“We will continue to work aggressively to uncover and prosecute those
who hide unreported income in secret offshore bank accounts as well as
the employees of financial institutions and the financial institutions
themselves who facilitate such crimes,” said U.S. Attorney for the
Central District of California André Birotte Jr.
“Most individuals file truthful tax returns voluntarily and pay their
share of taxes,” said Richard Weber, Chief, IRS-CI. “As these two
defendants have learned, hiding income and assets offshore is not tax
planning, it’s tax fraud. The IRS is vigorously pursuing unreported
income in hidden offshore accounts, as well as the banks and bankers who
assist them.”
United States citizens and residents who have an interest in, or
signature or other authority over, a financial account in a foreign
country with assets in excess of $10,000 are required to disclose the
existence of such account on Schedule B, Part III, of their individual
income tax returns. Additionally, U.S. citizens and residents must file a
Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Reports (FBAR) with the U.S.
Treasury disclosing any financial account in a foreign country with
assets in excess of $10,000 in which they have a financial interest, or
over which they have signature or other authority.
Both Kashfi and Sperling have agreed to pay a civil penalty in the
amount of 50 percent of the high balance of their undeclared accounts to
resolve their civil liability with the IRS for failing to file FBARs.
Both Kashfi and Sperling face a potential maximum prison term of five years and a maximum fine of $250,000.
Assistant Attorney General Keneally and U.S. Attorney Birotte thanked
special agents of IRS-CI, who investigated the case, and Tax Division
Senior Litigation Counsel John E. Sullivan and Assistant Chief Elizabeth
C. Hadden, who prosecuted these cases, and Assistant U.S. Attorney
Sandra A. Brown of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Central District
of California, who assisted with the prosecutions.
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