A former special agent for the Internal Revenue Service
Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI) Division was convicted on June 15 after a jury
in Sacramento, California found her guilty of filing false tax returns,
obstruction of justice and stealing government money, announced Principal
Deputy Assistant Attorney General Richard E. Zuckerman of the Justice
Department’s Tax Division and Acting U.S. Attorney Alex G. Tse for the Northern
District of California.
According to court documents and evidence introduced at
trial, Alena Aleykina, who is also a Certified Public Accountant and holds a
master’s degree in business administration, filed six false tax returns: three
personal tax returns for years 2009, 2010, and 2011 and three in the names of
trusts she created for years 2010 and 2011.
On her personal tax returns, Aleykina fraudulently claimed the head of
household filing status, false dependents, and deductions for education
expenses to which she was not entitled.
On her trust tax returns, she failed to report rent she received from
the tenants of her rental property and falsely claimed to be paying wages to
her mother and her sister to care for her son and for her father.
Additionally, Aleykina stole government funds and obstructed
justice during the investigation. She
stole from the IRS’s Tuition Assistance Program by falsely claiming $4,000 in
tuition reimbursement for classes that she did not take. When criminal investigators approached
Aleykina to retrieve her government laptop, Aleykina lied to the agents about
the location of the laptop and began deleting files from the computer after the
agents left. The total loss to the
government from Aleykina’s conduct is more than $60,000.
Sentencing has been scheduled for Sept. 25 before Judge John
A. Mendez. Aleykina faces a maximum
statutory penalty of three years in prison for each false tax return count, 10
years in prison for theft of government funds, and 20 years in prison for obstruction
of justice as well as a period of supervised release, restitution and monetary
penalties.
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Zuckerman and
Acting U.S. Attorney Tse thanked special agents of the Treasury Inspector
General for Tax Administration and IRS-CI, who conducted the investigation, and
Assistant U.S. Attorney William Frentzen and Tax Division Trial Attorneys
Arthur Ewenczyk and Charles O’Reilly, who are prosecuting the case.
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