Boston Herald

IRS agent charged with tax fraud

- By Flint McColgan flint.mccolgan@bostonhera­ld.com

A Boston IRS agent was indicted on charges that she committed personal tax fraud for years.

Ndeye Amy Thioub, 67, of Swampscott, has served as a Boston-based Internal Revenue Service agent out of the IRS’ Large Business and Internatio­nal Division since 2006 and has been a licensed certified public accountant in Massachuse­tts since 2010, according to an affidavit filed in support of her criminal charges by a fellow IRS agent.

Thioub was indicted Tuesday by a federal grand jury sitting in Boston on three counts each of filing false tax returns and filing false tax returns as an employee of the United States, counts for which she was originally charged by criminal complaint and arrested on March 20.

The feds say that Thioub has “extensive and specialize­d knowledge of accounting techniques, practices, and investigat­ive audit techniques,” which she knew well enough to teach as a visiting instructor at Salem State University between 2017 and 2021. Around the same time, she was allegedly filing tax returns that claimed heavy losses from an import or export business she claimed to have.

Despite her extensive training in investigat­ive auditing, the feds say that she filed these Schedule C losses in three consecutiv­e years: 2017, 2018 and 2019. According to a table included in the affidavit, Thioub claimed a total of $90,192 in losses during those three years, which significan­tly reduced her gross income and subsequent tax burden.

Those are the years for which she was charged, but the affidavit says that her alleged criminal activity lasted longer than that. IRS investigat­ors became interested during a review of large Schedule C loss claims over consecutiv­e years, during which her filings dating back to 2010 caused some concern.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An Internal Revenue Service (IRS) employee based in Boston is now on the other side of the table.
SUSAN WALSH, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An Internal Revenue Service (IRS) employee based in Boston is now on the other side of the table.

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