Financial Planner Network
Need a Financial Planner? Get a Free Case Review
  HOME ABOUT US FAQ FINANCIAL COMMUNITY NEWS & ARTICLES FINANCIAL REVIEW August 27, 2008
Financial Planning-Advance Search
             
 
Selecting a financial planner is a very important decision. Please enter a zip code to find a financial planner in your area:
 
Zip Code:  
   
 

Financial Planner
Hot Topics

 
 
     
  Reverse Mortgage For Seniors
     
  Financial Planner
     
  Estate Planning
     
  Retirement Investment Planning
     
  529 College Plan Savings
     
  Equity Indexed Life Insurance
     
  Roth 401k Rollover
     
  Roth IRA vs Traditional IRA
     
  401k Rollover Rules
     
  Best Money Market Funds
     
  Simple IRA Limit
 
 


Financial Planner
Resource
Center

 
   

Financial Planning Newsroom

< Back to Previous Page

Former Chief Financial Officer of Catholic Diocese of Cleveland Convicted of Conspiracy & Filing False Tax Returns

A federal jury returned guilty verdicts today against Joseph H. Smith, the former Treasurer, Chief Financial Officer and Legal Secretary for the Catholic Diocese of Cleveland, the Justice Department announced. Smith, an attorney and certified public accountant, was convicted on six tax charges after a six-week trial in a Cleveland federal court. The jury acquitted Smith of mail fraud and conspiracy to commit mail fraud.

Smith’s co-defendant, Anton Zgoznik, was convicted in October 2007 of similar charges. Zgoznik is a former Diocese employee who owned and operated several corporations that provided accounting, tax, financial and computer technology services for the Diocese.

According to the indictment and evidence established during trial, Smith and Zgoznik entered into an elaborate scheme to defraud the Diocese and related organizations and to defraud the IRS. Between 1997 and 2003, Zgoznik paid more than $784,000 in kickbacks to Smith in exchange for Smith’s efforts to steer work to the entities that Zgoznik controlled. As a result, the Diocese paid the entities controlled by Zgoznik more than $17.5 million between 1997 and 2003. Some of the bills to the Diocese were inflated or were for services that were not needed.

Evidence also showed that Smith and Zgoznik defrauded the IRS by disguising the kickback payments as compensation for "consulting" and "legal" services that Smith purportedly provided for the Zgoznik entities. The two defendants disguised the kickbacks in part by having Zgoznik’s companies pay the kickbacks by checks payable to a golf paraphernalia business (Tee Sports Inc.) operated by Smith and to another business name used by Smith (JHS Enterprises), as purported payments for legal, consulting and other services not actually rendered by Smith. As a result of this scheme, Smith and Zgoznik were able to deceive the IRS during an audit of Smith’s 1999 tax return and three years of returns for the Zgoznik entities. Smith also failed to report some of the kickbacks on his tax returns and misreported other kickbacks as "business income" on his Schedule C.

John A. Marrella, Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Tax Division, stated: "This conviction serves as yet another reminder that individuals who break our nation’s tax laws face serious consequences. Citizens who comply with our tax laws can be assured that the United States vigorously prosecutes those who choose to violate the tax laws."

"All income is taxable, even income that is stolen from others or disguised as legitimate income," said Eileen Mayer, IRS Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI) Chief. "Today’s conviction proves that there is no way to hide illegal deeds from the government."

The court dismissed eight money laundering charges against Smith. Smith faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. Sentencing before U.S. District Judge Ann Aldrich is set for Oct. 3, 2008.

Deputy Assistant Attorney General Marrella thanked IRS-CI, U.S. Postal Inspection Service and the FBI who investigated this case, as well as Tax Division trial attorney Jerrod Patterson and Assistant U.S. Attorney John M. Siegel who prosecuted this case.


Contact a financial professional in your area now for a free case review.




Latest News
& Articles

     
  Aug 25, 2008 - U.S. Court Permanently Bars Washington State ...
A federal court has permanently barred a Tacoma, Wash., woman from selling a tax scam, the Justice Department announced today...
Read more >
 
     

     
  Aug 20, 2008 - SEC Announces 18 Million Fair Fund Distributi...
The Securities and Exchange Commission today distributed more than $18 million to more than 325,000 investors who were affected by undisclosed market timing ...
Read more >
 
     

More News & Articles >

Regional
Resources
 


Legal Disclaimers
The information provided on Financial Planner Network.com is not intended to be financial advice, but merely conveys general information related to financial issues commonly encountered.
Sitemap

© 2008 Orion Foundry (US), Inc. – Directory Services. All rights reserved.