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Crime Businesses Software The Almighty Buck The Courts United States

Billionaire CEO of Software Company Indicted For Alleged $2 Billion Tax Evasion Schemes (zdnet.com) 75

The billionaire chief executive of Ohio-based Reynolds and Reynolds Co, Robert Brockman, has been indicted on charges of tax evasion and wire fraud conducted over "decades." ZDNet reports: The scheme, in which roughly $2 billion was hidden away in offshore accounts and through money laundering, took place between 1999 and 2019, the US Department of Justice (DoJ) said on Thursday. According to the indictment (.PDF), the resident of both Houston, Texas, and Pitkin County, Colorado allegedly used a "web" of offshore organizations in Bermuda and Nevis to hide the profits he made from investments in private equity funds.

Brockman squirreled away his capital gains and also tampered with the evidence of his alleged activities, prosecutors say, by methods including backdating records and using "encrypted communications and code words" to communicate with co-conspirators, including the phrases "Permit," "King," and "Redfish." A ranch, luxury home, and yacht were among the purchases apparently made with non-taxed income. US prosecutors also say that between 2008 and 2010, Brockman used a third-party entity to purchase $67.8 million in debt securities from the software company. As CEO, the executive is not permitted to do so without full disclosure as it can have an impact on share prices and trading; however, Brockman allegedly did so without informing sellers.

As a result, approximately $2 billion in income was kept hidden from the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS). In addition, US prosecutors allege that investors in the software firm's debt securities were also defrauded. A federal grand jury in San Francisco, California has issued a 39-count indictment, including seven counts of tax evasion, 20 counts of wire fraud, money laundering, evidence tampering, and destruction of evidence.

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Billionaire CEO of Software Company Indicted For Alleged $2 Billion Tax Evasion Schemes

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  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Friday October 16, 2020 @08:04PM (#60617122) Journal

    Sounds well-qualified to be President of the USA

    • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @05:19AM (#60618104)

      Sounds well-qualified to be President of the USA

      You're not too far off. This article from Forbes lists the at least $1 billion in debt the con artist owes (not the $400 million previously reported). One of the more interesting parts is this:

      The debt against Trump’s Chicago tower includes the most confounding liability in his portfolio. In addition to a Deutsche Bank loan for what seems to be $45 million, there’s a loan of more than $50 million, from a creditor named Chicago Unit Acquisition LLC. Here’s where things gets confusing: Donald Trump owns Chicago Unit Acquisition LLC, so he’s lending money to himself. If one of his companies owes more than $50 million to another one of his companies, then the company lending the money should theoretically be worth more than $50 million. But Trump does not list any value for Chicago Unit Acquisition LLC on his financial disclosure report. All of this has befuddled investigative reporters from Mother Jones, the Washington Post and, yes, Forbes for years.

      And here's something else. Chicago Unit Acquisition LLC lists no employees, has no contact information and never files any financial paperwork.

      It's almost as if this company isn't real and the con artist simply pulled fake money out of the air.

    • Except he got caught, so he's a loser, right?

  • by sphealey ( 2855 ) on Friday October 16, 2020 @08:20PM (#60617184)

    Only little people and suckers pay taxes.

    • Can confirm, the more money I've made every year, the more I save in taxes with professional tax services.

    • People like you?
    • Only little people and suckers pay taxes.

      I understand from recent news that this has got so bad that philanthropic millionaires are complaining that they do not pay enough tax, when compared to most salaried employees. It is not uncommon for a wealthy person to pay tax in the low teens percentage-wise. It is not just that wealthy people are employing clever accountants, lawyers and bankers to avoid paying taxes. Some forms of income, which only the rich can enjoy, are just not taxed enough, compared to wages and salaries that ordinary folk live on

  • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Friday October 16, 2020 @08:55PM (#60617244) Homepage Journal

    Dumb ones lie about their income.

    After so many years of political favors to the wealthy, a billionaire who cheats at his taxes is cheating in a game that's already rigged in his favor.

    • by Krishnoid ( 984597 ) on Friday October 16, 2020 @10:20PM (#60617398) Journal

      He has agreed to pay $139 million in taxes and penalties and forfeit $182 million in charitable donations.

      And now that he's caught cheating, it's rigged in his favor enough to forfeit only about $320E6 [justice.gov], or about a 16% rate on $2E9 [youtu.be] in income. How does this work again? Incentives or something?

    • a billionaire who cheats at his taxes is cheating in a game that's already rigged in his favor.

      Uhm, duh.

    • by tflf ( 4410717 )

      Dumb ones lie about their income.

      After so many years of political favors to the wealthy, a billionaire who cheats at his taxes is cheating in a game that's already rigged in his favor.

      I wonder: was scamming the shareholders just a bonus? I suspect his ego got a huge boost from scamming both the government and the shareholders at the same time.

  • This is the sort of asshole they should be literally raking over the coals. 2 billion. What a fucking cunt.
  • With the right kind of donation, he might end up being pardoned yet...

  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @12:41AM (#60617624)

    Seems like the perfect candidate for Republicans 2024 presidential nomination assuming the current one can be persuaded to leave.

  • by ytene ( 4376651 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @02:20AM (#60617758)
    Life is never this simple, but if you do the math, tax evasion to the tune of $2 Billion in 20 years means that Brockman was hiding an average of $100 million a year.

    We also know from the article that he did make several significant purchases ("a ranch, a yacht and a luxury home"), but of course these could have been purchased by a holding company - say one set up in a tax haven - to hide the true owners.

    But seriously? How on earth did the IRS miss this for 20 years?
    • by Cederic ( 9623 )

      How would they spot it?

      $100m is a lot of money but you can't track every transaction and assure that all taxes are being paid on it.

      If someone's explicitly trying to hide those transactions, that makes it even harder.

      If those hidden transactions can be reasonably portrayed as business activity and not payments to an individual, they don't even look suspicious.

    • "But seriously? How on earth did the IRS miss this for 20 years?"

      The deck is stacked against them, and us. If you worked a second job for a month over the summer and forgot to report that income, they'd let you know, and if you didn't pay, your current employer would get a nastygram and garnish your wages. And they'd do that over a few hundred bucks.

      Hiding millions in business transactions and capital gains is infinitely easier than hiding your W2 from Orange Julius.

      Write your congressman, ask for more fu

    • by cusco ( 717999 )

      Newt Gingrich's moment of brilliance was when he realized that he didn't need to eliminate popular regulatory agencies like the EPA or FDA, all he needed to do was move their enforcement functions to a separate line item in the budget and squeeze it into oblivion. The IRS auditing and enforcement division used to make the government money, and most of the fees and penalties were plowed back into the agency to fund the complex investigations
      necessary to turn up hundreds of millions of missing money. Gingri

  • I thought that billionaires could loophole all taxes in perfectly legal ways. There must be some problem with that assumption.

    • I thought that billionaires could loophole all taxes in perfectly legal ways. There must be some problem with that assumption.

      Some people are so greedy that the bonanza they are already offered is not enough. They just love being crafty to make more money, even if they do not need the money. "Greed is good" is alive and well.

  • It's long been known that if you owe a thousand dollars, you're a piker, if you owe a million you're a tycoon, and if you owe a billion you're a government.

    Now we know what owing *two* billion means . . .

    hawk

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