A Kings Mountain, North Carolina, man, who set up straw
companies to evade income taxes and used cash from his business to build an underground
bunker, pleaded guilty today to tax evasion and possession of an unregistered
firearm, announced Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Caroline D.
Ciraolo, head of the Justice Department’s Tax Division and U.S. Attorney Jill
Westmoreland Rose for the Western District of North Carolina.
According to documents filed with the court, Reuben T.
DeHaan ,44, owned a holistic medicine business, which he operated out of his
residence in Kings Mountain under the names Health Care Ministries International
Inc. and Get Well Stay Well. DeHaan
admitted that, with the help of others, he set up straw companies and opened
bank accounts in the name of the straw companies to hide his income and assets
from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
DeHaan also admitted to dealing extensively in cash to evade the payment
of income tax. During the years 2008
through 2014, DeHaan earned more than $2.7 million in gross receipts from his
holistic medicine business, but failed to file income tax returns for those
years and evaded approximately $740,000 in income taxes due and owing.
In addition to the tax evasion charge, DeHaan also admitted
to possessing a short barrel rifle and two silencers that were not registered
to him in the National Firearms Registration and Transfer Record.
A sentencing date has not yet been scheduled. DeHaan faces a statutory maximum sentence of
five years in prison for the tax evasion charge and ten years in prison for the
unregistered firearm charge, as well as a term of supervised release, and
monetary penalties.
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Ciraolo and U.S.
Attorney Rose commended special agents of IRS-Criminal Investigation and the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, who conducted the investigation, and Assistant
U.S. Attorney Michael Savage and Trial Attorney Mara Strier of the Tax
Division, who are prosecuting the case.
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