Corona Tax Preparer Admits Creating Fraudulent Returns

Connor Forbes
Connor Forbes
3 Min Read
Photo by Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash

Corona Tax Preparer Tax Fraud

RIVERSIDE (CNS) – A Corona tax preparer who filed fraudulent returns over a five-year period could face up to nine years in federal prison when he’s sentenced in October.

Salvador Gonzalez pleaded guilty Monday to three counts of aiding and assisting in the preparation of false tax returns.

The plea agreement with the U.S. Attorney’s Office was announced during a hearing before U.S. District Judge Jesus Bernal at the federal courthouse in downtown Riverside. Bernal scheduled a sentencing hearing for Oct. 7.

Each count carries a maximum three-year prison term.

Gonzalez remains free on bond.

He was arrested in March 2023 after a federal grand jury handed down a 47-count indictment.

According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the defendant operated Grace’s Lighthouse Resource Center Inc., and from 2016 to 2021, he “prepared income tax returns for individuals and corporate clients to submit to the IRS that claimed tens of thousands of dollars in bogus business losses.”

“Gonzalez directed his clients to create a phony corporation and to title their homes, cars and other assets in the name of the corporation,” the agency stated. “Gonzalez then referred those clients to an associate to prepare these sham corporations’ tax returns.”

Prosecutors said the defendant arranged for customers to submit business and personal expenses, including mortgage and car payments, as well as utility bills, indicating a “loss” at the end of every tax cycle.

“Gonzalez then prepared the clients’ individual income tax returns, which incorporated the fraudulent business losses and offset their income,” the U.S. Attorney’s Office said. “To further reduce the clients’ taxes owed to the IRS, Gonzalez fabricated deductions on the personal returns such as unreimbursed employee expenses, cash contributions to charity and medical and dental expenses.”

The defendant’s fees were initially $500 per return, but in 2019, he converted the payment for services to 1% of customers’ adjusted gross incomes, prosecutors said.

The case was investigated by the IRS.

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Tax Fraud
Photo by Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash
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