Attempted to Evade More Than $467,000 in Excise Taxes
A Los Angeles, California man pleaded guilty yesterday to
illegally engaging in the business of importing tobacco products, announced
Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General Stuart M. Goldberg of the Justice
Department’s Tax Division and U.S. Attorney Eileen M. Decker for the Central
District of California.
Zhi Xiong Chen, 56, of Chinatown, admitted that for nearly
five years, despite not holding a permit to import tobacco products, he used
several addresses to receive 15,128 cartons of Chinese-brand cigarettes. During
this time, U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers also stopped
approximately 9,824 cartons of Chinese-brand cigarettes at international mail
facilities in California and New York.
As part of the scheme, Chen admitted that he attempted to
evade paying more than $467,000 in federal and state excise taxes on the
cigarettes that he illegally imported.
“While Zhi Xiong Chen was illegally importing tens of
thousands of cartons of cigarettes into the United States, he was also evading
hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxes due on those cigarettes,” said Acting
Deputy Assistant Attorney General Goldberg. “Importers who obtain the required
permits and pay their fair share of taxes deserve to compete on a level playing
field. Those who try to cut corners and skirt these legal obligations should
know that they will be investigated and prosecuted.”
“From early 2011 until mid-2016, this defendant illegally
imported thousands of cartons of Chinese-made cigarettes without the necessary
permits and without paying excise taxes,” said U.S. Attorney Decker. “The
defendant’s crime not only cheated taxpayers, but also caused unregulated,
potentially dangerous products to be sold to an unsuspecting public.”
Sentencing is scheduled for April 17. Chen faces a statutory
maximum penalty of five years in prison, a period of supervised release,
restitution and monetary penalties.
Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General Goldberg and U.S.
Attorney Decker thanked special agents of IRS–Criminal Investigation, the
Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, and the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration’s Criminal Investigations, who conducted the investigation, and
Assistant U.S. Attorney Valerie L. Makarewicz and Trial Attorney Christopher S.
Strauss of the Tax Division, who are prosecuting the case.
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