Office
of Public Affairs
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday,
March 6, 2012
A federal court has permanently
barred Tracy L. Sunderlage, Linda Sunderlage and four companies from operating
an alleged scheme to help high-income individuals attempt to avoid income taxes
by funneling money through purported employee benefit plans, the Justice
Department announced today. Judge John W. Darrah of the U.S. District Court for
the Northern District of Illinois entered the permanent injunction orders, to
which the defendants consented, against the Sunderlages, SRG International
Ltd., of Nevis, West Indies, and three Illinois companies - SRG International
U.S. LLC, Maven U.S. LLC and Randall Administration LLC.
According to the government complaint, the defendants claimed to promote and operate plans that
provide insurance benefits to participating companies’ employees, when in fact
the scheme is simply a mechanism for the companies’ owners to receive
purportedly tax-free or tax-deferred income for their personal use. Tracy
Sunderlage and the two SRG International companies allegedly marketed the
scheme to high-income professionals who own small, closely held companies. In
the most recent version of the alleged scheme, each participant’s company made
supposedly tax deductible payments to a purported benefit plan operated by
Maven U.S. and Randall Administration. The company’s contributions were then
allegedly transferred to an account within a company based in the Caribbean
island of Anguilla, in which they were allegedly invested until the owner
terminated from the program and received the assets for his or her personal
use. The complaint alleged that many participants owned these accounts through
offshore trusts, which Tracy Sunderlage and SRG International Ltd. often helped
to establish. The complaint alleged that participants from across the country
have transferred at least $239 million as part of the scheme and that total
contributions may exceed $300 million.
The injunction orders bar the
defendants from operating or promoting any purported “welfare benefit plans.”
The court also ordered the defendants to provide the government with a list of
their customers and to send copies of the injunction orders to their customers.
In the past decade, the Justice
Department’s Tax Division has obtained hundreds of injunctions against
promoters of tax schemes and preparers of fraudulent tax returns. Information
about these cases is available on the Justice Department website.
12-290
Tax
Division
LANCEWALLACHEXPERTWITNESS.INFO
1 comment:
Great thoughts you got there, believe I may possibly try just some of it throughout my daily life.
Maven company Offshore
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