WASHINGTON - A federal a grand jury sitting in Fort Worth,
Texas returned an indictment yesterday charging a husband and wife and a Texas
attorney with conspiring to defraud the United States and separately charging
the husband and wife with tax evasion, announced Principal Deputy Assistant
Attorney General Richard E. Zuckerman of the Justice Department’s Tax Division
and U.S. Attorney Erin Nealy Cox for the Northern District of Texas.
According to the indictment, Thomas and Michelle Selgas, a
married couple, conspired with John O. Green, an attorney licensed to practice
in the State of Texas, to defraud the United States by obstructing the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) from assessing and collecting the Selgases’ federal
income taxes. The indictment charges
that in furtherance of the conspiracy the Selgases transferred personal funds
to Green’s IOLTA and that Green would pay personal expenses of the Selgases from
his IOLTA. An IOLTA is bank account
used by a lawyer to hold money in trust for clients. The Selgases allegedly deposited the proceeds
from the sale of gold coins and other income into Green’s IOLTAs, rather than
accounts in their own name, and then caused their personal expenditures to be
paid from Green’s IOLTAs, in order to evade paying their federal income
taxes. The indictment further alleges
that all three defendants were involved in the filing of a false partnership
tax return related to a partnership co-founded by Thomas Selgas.
If convicted, Thomas and Michelle Selgas face a statutory
maximum sentence of five years in prison on the tax evasion charges and five
years on the conspiracy. John Green
faces a maximum sentence of five years on the conspiracy. The defendants also face a period of
supervised release, restitution and monetary penalties. An indictment is an
accusation. A defendant is presumed
innocent unless and until proven guilty.
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Zuckerman and
U.S. Attorney Cox and thanked agents of the IRS Criminal Investigation, who
conducted the investigation, and Tax Division Trial Attorneys Robert A. Kemins
and Mara Strier, who are prosecuting the case.
Additional information about the Tax Division’s enforcement
efforts can be found on the division’s website.
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