SAN DIEGO – Robert Holcomb, 53, was sentenced in federal
court today to 46 months’ custody and ordered to pay a fine of $600,000, for
misappropriating the identities of charities and using them to open bank
accounts as part of a long-running tax fraud scheme.
Holcomb, who appeared before U.S. District Court Judge
William Q. Hayes, was convicted by a federal jury on July 20, 2018 of four
counts of making false statements to a financial institution.
According to the evidence presented at trial, Holcomb held
himself out as an “asset protection” specialist who had the ability to use
charitable trust accounts to reduce the tax liability of clients. Holcomb
convinced his clients to forward him the profits from their businesses, which
he then cycled through a series of bank accounts—with names that sounded like
charities—and then returned the funds, minus a commission, with the assurance
that they no longer constituted taxable income. Holcomb’s clients then filed
tax returns that substantially underreported their true income, resulting in
millions of dollars in lost income to the IRS.
Over the course of a decade, Holcomb transferred more than $12 million
in otherwise taxable income through his accounts, collecting “commissions” from
his clients of more than $1 million dollars.
In 2011, after a number of Holcomb’s bank accounts were
frozen, he was forced to open dozens of new accounts to keep the tax-evasion
scheme operating. To do so, Holcomb began creating corporate entities whose
names matched those of existing charities; misappropriating the taxpayer
identification information from those charities; and then using their names and
identification numbers to open new bank accounts. These charities included:
Light of Life LLC,
which operated a soup kitchen and rescue mission in Pittsburgh, PA;
On Eagle’s Wings
LLC, which provided missionary outreach in the Northwest Territories of Canada;
Push the Rock,
LLC, a Christian Sports Ministry, in Pennsylvania; and
Sharing and
Caring, LLC, a veteran’s organization that organized an annual boat trip for
wounded veterans in Pittsburgh.
Representatives from each organization testified at trial
that they did not know Holcomb, never gave him authorization to use their
identities, and were unaware that he opened bank accounts in their name. When
confronted about his affiliation with the charities, in a recorded call,
Holcomb claimed that he had a “fiduciary relationship” and “run[s] everything.”
When IRS agents then executed a search warrant on Holcomb’s residence, he admitted
to using the charities’ numbers, but claimed that he could “use whatever
number” he wanted, because he was “USA posterity.” Holcomb explained that he
was “part of the upper caste” that was descended from the original founders of
the “Massachusetts Bay Company.” As such, he explained, he was not required to
pay taxes and was not subject to the Constitution.
“Holcomb used a series of sham trust arrangements to divert
millions of taxpayer dollars into his own pocket,” said U.S. Attorney Robert
Brewer. “His offense was particularly
egregious because he used the identities of real charities in order to avoid
detection and continue collecting commissions on funds that should have gone to
the U.S. Treasury. No one is above the law, and merely claiming to be a sovereign
citizen will not exempt you from criminal liability.”
“As today’s sentencing shows, individuals who create
elaborate schemes that have no purpose other than to defraud the IRS and
financial institutions will be prosecuted and suffer a loss of freedom,” said
Acting Special Agent in Charge Bryant Jackson of IRS Criminal
Investigation. “With filing season in
full swing, it is a good time to remember that the IRS will actively pursue
fraudsters who cleverly orchestrate these types of avoidance schemes.”
The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Daniel
Zipp and Seth Askins.
DEFENDANT
16-CR-1408-WQH
Robert Holcomb
Age: 53 San Marcos,
CA
SUMMARY OF CHARGES
Making False Statements to a Financial Institution (18
U.S.C. 1014)
AGENCIES
Federal Bureau of Investigations
Internal Revenue Service
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
No comments:
Post a Comment