Baltimore Sun

Two tax preparers plead guilty to filing false returns

- By Lorraine Mirabella lorraine.mirabella@baltsun.com twitter.com/lmirabella

Two Baltimore-area tax preparers pleaded guilty to filing false returns, Maryland’s attorney general and comptrolle­r said Tuesday.

The operator of MKTaxServi­ce, Michael Anegbode, 29, of Windsor Mill, pleaded guilty to three counts of filing false income tax returns, Attorney General Brian E. Frosh and Comptrolle­r Peter Franchot said. Anegbode was ordered to pay $48,808 in restitutio­n and serve three years’ probation.

The operator of Jovan Tax Service, Uwagbale Oigbokie, 39, of Baltimore, pleaded guilty to two counts of filing false tax returns. He was ordered to pay $81,712 in restitutio­n and serve two years’ probation, the announceme­nt said.

The criminal investigat­ions division of the attorney general’s office prosecuted the cases, which represent the state’s latest effort to uncover fraudulent tax schemes.

Over the past few years, Franchot’s office has blocked tax returns from dozens of tax preparers because of high volumes of questionab­le returns. In those cases, regulators flagged returns for reasons such as reporting business income for taxpayers whodon’t ownabusine­ss, requesting refund amounts significan­tly higher than in previous years and including inflated and undocument­ed business expenses and questionab­le claims for dependents.

In the recent cases, both tax preparers filed personal tax returns that failed to report fees they earned. Many of the returns filed for clients included false informatio­n that minimized the clients’ Maryland tax liabilitie­s and boosted their tax refunds.

“These tax preparers had a responsibi­lity to file honest returns,” Frosh said. “They cheated twice.”

Franchot called protecting state taxpayers from unscrupulo­us tax preparers a top priority.

“Our field enforcemen­t officers will continue to vigilantly investigat­e those who try to cheat our state,” the comptrolle­r said.

Both preparers who pleaded guilty ran single locations.

“Whether a preparer has multiple locations or single, the crime is still the crime,” said Raquel Coombs, a spokeswoma­n for the attorney general’s office. “We’re still going to go after them and prosecute them. Essentiall­y, they’re all stealing from the state.”

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