PORTLAND, Ore.—U.S. Attorney Billy J. Williams announced
today that a Beaverton, Oregon man has been charged for his role in one of the
largest tax evasion schemes ever prosecuted in the District of Oregon. In this
multiyear scheme, contracting companies, subcontracting companies, and their
employees evaded more than $65 million in employment and income taxes owed to
the IRS.
Victor Hugo Lopez-Diaz, 38, was charged by criminal
information with one count of conspiring to commit tax evasion and two counts
of filing false tax returns.
“Evading the payment of Medicare, Social Security, and
income taxes harms every citizen,” said Billy J. Williams, U.S. Attorney for
the District of Oregon. “All business owners and their employees must file
accurate tax returns with the IRS and pay all taxes required by law. Those who
fail to do so will face significant consequences, including criminal
prosecution, prison, and monetary penalties.”
“Employers that willfully concoct elaborate schemes to evade
paying employment taxes will be held accountable by the Internal Revenue
Service,” said IRS-Criminal Investigation Special Agent in Charge Justin
Campbell. “This type of fraud does not go unnoticed by our investigators. Fraud
of this variety not only impacts honest taxpayers, but significantly impacts
honest competitors who follow the rules. Businesses that seek an unfair
competitive advantage by cheating the Treasury of payroll taxes will always be
a high priority for IRS-Criminal Investigation.”
According to court documents, from at least 2014 through
February 2018, Lopez-Diaz and his conspirators are alleged to have successfully
evaded their personal and employment tax obligations by cashing approximately
$185 million in payroll checks at a co-conspirator’s check cashing business;
using the cash to pay construction workers under the table; and filing false
corporation, payroll, and individual tax returns.
Lopez-Diaz and some of his co-conspirators established
subcontracting companies to facilitate their tax evasion conspiracy. Along with
the owners and operators of local contracting companies, they knowingly hired
unlicensed work crews, paid them cash under the table, and evaded payroll taxes
by not putting the workers on their regular payroll systems.
Throughout the conspiracy, Lopez-Diaz also functioned as a
payroll check casher for other companies. He used an alias, Miguel Lopez, to
cash payroll checks and conceal his identity and gave the cash received to the
leaders of off-the-books work crews and to contractors who used the cash to pay
other employees surreptitiously.
Lopez-Diaz’s first appearance in federal court is scheduled
for April 21, 2020.
If convicted, Lopez-Diaz faces a maximum sentence of 11
years in federal prison, three years’ supervised release, and $750,000 in
fines.
A criminal information is only an accusation of a crime, and
a defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
This case is being investigated by IRS-Criminal
Investigation and prosecuted by Seth D. Uram and Gavin W. Bruce, Assistant U.S.
Attorneys for the District of Oregon.
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