Thomas William Quintin, 65, formerly of Denver, pleaded guilty to one
count of conspiracy to defraud the United States with respect to claims,
and one count of misuse of a Social Security number (SSN), before U.S.
District Court Judge R. Brooke Jackson, the U.S. Department of Justice
and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) announced. Quintin is scheduled to be
sentenced by Judge Jackson on April 2, 2013.
Quintin and a co-conspirator were indicted by a federal grand jury in
Denver on Feb. 8, 2012. According to the stipulated facts contained in
the plea agreement, starting in July 2009, Quintin participated in a
conspiracy to submit to the IRS thousands of false federal individual
income tax returns claiming a total of $1,834,011 in refunds in the
names of deceased individuals. As part of the scheme, the conspirators
established, controlled, and operated a Colorado entity known as Total
Tax Services and/or Total Tax and Accounting (TTS), which maintained an
office location in Englewood, Colo. They hired other individuals to work
at TTS, which they used during the period of July 2009 through October
2009 to prepare and file the false tax returns.
According to court records, Quintin and his coconspirator obtained from
an online database the names, dates of birth, SSNs and other identifying
information of deceased individuals which they used to prepare and file
tax returns in their names. They hired at least one individual whose
job was to create email accounts for those deceased individuals;
establishing email accounts in the names of the deceased individuals was
necessary in order to file the tax returns on-line. They also obtained
employer identification numbers (EINs) for various businesses, which
they used to claim falsely on tax returns that the deceased individuals
had worked at those businesses during the year 2008, earned income, and
had taxes withheld from that income; all to allow Quintin and his
coconspirator to claim false refunds based on that false income tax
withholding.
“The investigation and prosecution of those who commit stolen identity
refund fraud is a top priority of the Justice Department,” said Kathryn
Keneally, Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Tax
Division. “The theft of deceased persons’ identities to steal money from
the Treasury victimizes all honest taxpayers, and adds to the burdens
of grieving family members.”
“
Identity theft creates a significant hardship for many American
families, and robs our Nation of taxpayer dollars,” stated Richard
Weber, Chief, IRS Criminal Investigation. IRS remains vigilant in
identifying, investigating and prosecuting those individuals who seek to
willfully defraud the United States Treasury and have a blatant
disregard for the victims of their schemes.”
Quintin faces a maximum potential sentence of 10 years in federal prison
on the conspiracy charge, and five years on the misuse of a SSN charge.
On both charges, he faces a fine of up to $250,000.
This case was investigated by IRS-Criminal Investigation, and is being
prosecuted by Tax Division Trial Attorney John Scully with the
assistance of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Colorado.
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