AURORA | An Aurora loan broker who investigators say under reported more than $4 million in income from 2002 to 2005 has pleaded guilty to filing a false tax reform, federal prosecutors said Monday.
Leonid Shifrin, 40, of Aurora, faces up to three years in prison and a $250,000 fine, according to a stament from the United States Attorney’s Office in Denver.
According to the statement Shifrin worked as a mortgage loan broker from 2002 to 2005, originating and closing loans for residential real properties and during that time under-reported his business receipts by $4,745,600. Because of the under reporting, Shifrin owes $1,365,788 in additional income taxes.
Click below for the release from the US Attorney.
AURORA LOAN BROKER PLEADS GUILTY TO OMITTING OVER $4.7 MILLION FROM TAX RETURNS
DENVER – Leonid Shifrin, age 40, of Aurora, Colorado pled guilty recently to one count of filing a false income tax return, United States Attorney John Walsh and IRS Criminal Investigation, Denver Field Office, Special Agent in Charge Sean Sowards announced. The guilty plea was tendered before U.S. District Court Judge Philip A. Brimmer on March 2, 2011. Judge Brimmer is scheduled to sentence Shifrin on June 24, 2011. Shifrin was indicted by a Federal Grand Jury in Denver on April 20, 2010. A superseding indictment was obtained on June 22, 2010.
According to the stipulated facts contained in the plea agreement, from 2002 through 2005, Leonid Shifrin was principally employed as a mortgage loan broker, originating and closing loans for residential real properties. Shifrin, according to government calculations set forth I the plea agreement, under-reported his business receipts by $4,745,600 for the years 2002 through 2005. This under-reporting of the business receipts for these years would result in an additional tax due and owing of $1,365,788.
Beginning in or about 2002, Shifrin conducted his mortgage brokerage business in partnership with others under the name Consumer Mortgage Group (“CMG”), with offices initially in Aurora, Colorado and later Centennial, Colorado. During this time, the defendant also formed a Nevada corporation under the name Mark Shifrin, Inc., using the first and last names of his father, who at the time was retired and working various part-time jobs, including for a pizza restaurant as a pizza deliverer and dishwasher. During this time, Shifrin indicated to his partners that checks issued to him for his loan commission payments and ownership distributions issued to him should be made payable to him under either the name “Mark Shifrin” or Mark Shifrin, Inc. The defendant also started titling various of his assets, including real estate, in these names and opened and started to use bank accounts in these names.
In or about August 2003, after one of the partners left the business, CMG changed its name to Consumer Financial Services Corp. (“CFS”). Shifrin continued to receive almost all of his loan commission payments and ownership distributions through checks not made payable to him. Shifrin received these payments either in his father’s name, in the name of Mark Shifrin, Inc., or in the name of Shifrin, Inc., a Colorado corporation that Shifrin formed in or about September 2004 but whose name he began using sometime earlier.
In or about August 2004, Shifrin ceased conducting most of his mortgage loan brokerage business through CFS, withdrew from the partnership, and entered into a collaboration with a loan processor who had been a former employee and was, at the time, self-employed doing business under the name Mile High Mortgage Process, LLC (“Mile High Mortgage”). The loan processor operated Mile High Mortgage out of offices in Greenwood Village, Colorado and later, Golden, Colorado, while Shifrin and his employees operated out of offices in Centennial, Colorado. During this collaboration, Shifrin continued to structure his activities to avoid reporting all of his business’s mortgage loan commissions on federal income tax returns.
“With the April 15 tax deadline approaching, it is important for people to have confidence that when they pay their taxes, their neighbors and competitors will do the same,” said Sean Sowards, Special Agent in Charge of the IRS-Criminal Investigation, Denver Field Office.
Shifrin faces not more than 3 years imprisonment, and up to a $250,000.00 fine.
This case was investigated by Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI).
This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Kenneth Harmon.
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