Professional Documents
Culture Documents
“People who promote and facilitate tax evasion can expect to be prosecuted,
convicted, and sentenced to substantial time in federal prison,” said Eileen J.
O’Connor, Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Tax Division.
“The Department of Justice is working diligently with the Internal Revenue Service
to shut down tax fraud programs that cheat all honest taxpayers.”
According to the indictment and evidence introduced during trial, between 1994 and
2000, Shanahan and his co-conspirator Stephenson assisted hundreds of taxpayers in
forming and operating “pure equity trusts.” Shanahan falsely advised customers that
they could avoid paying income taxes if they placed their income and assets into the
trusts, even though they continued to control the use of the income and assets
placed in the trusts. According to evidence introduced at trial, Stephenson and
Shanahan received more than $2 million in revenue from the sales of more than 400
of these trust packages.
“Promoting abusive trust arrangements for the purpose of committing tax evasion
isn’t tax planning; it’s criminal activity,” said Nancy Jardini, Chief, IRS Criminal
Investigations. “We will continue to shut down fraudulent tax schemes and hold the
promoters of these schemes accountable for their actions.”
Two months after his convictions, on April 26, 2006, Shanahan consented to a
permanent injunction that forbids him from promoting the scheme. Information
about the injunction can be found at
http://www.usdoj.gov/tax/Shanahan_PermInj.pdf.
More information about the Justice Department’s efforts against tax-scam promoters
can be found at http://www.usdoj.gov/tax/taxpress2006.htm.
###
06-680