United States v. Jones, No. 14-1327 (8th Cir. 2015)
Annotate this CaseJones owned SAM Packaging and owed several hundred thousand dollars in back taxes for 2006-2008. Jones refused to provide the IRS with bank statements, and later submitted statements, with blacked-out parts. He submitted financial disclosure forms, disclosing accounts at Mutual of Omaha Bank (MO), but not accounts at Community Credit Union. He directed his financial activity to the undisclosed accounts. When the IRS levied on Jones’s MO accounts, they were nearly empty. Jones commingled personal and business accounts, then began dealing in cash. He refused to turn over accounts receivable, stating that he would terminate the business before doing so. In 2010, he declared that SAM had been “suspended” and he was unemployed. He had started a new company to secretly serve his customers. The IRS summonsed customers and learned Jones had performed work without billing them, preventing levy on his accounts receivable. Jones pled guilty to tax evasion, 26 U.S.C. 7201. The district court imposed a two-level enhancement for use of sophisticated means, as recommended in the PSR. After a three-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility, the district court calculated a Guidelines range of 30 to 37 months and sentenced Jones to 24 months. The Eighth Circuit affirmed, rejecting an argument that Jones’s actions were typical of tax evasion offenses and did not make detection more difficult.
Court Description: Criminal case - Sentencing. The district court did nor err in imposing a sophisticated means enhancement under Guidelines Section 2T1.1(b)(2) where defendant's tax evasion offenses involved a repetitive and coordinated scheme to hide his assets from the U.S.
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