Grimy Times

Charles Cathcart, Tax Scheme, California 2023

Published November 24, 2009

Charles Cathcart, Tax Scheme, California 2023

WASHINGTON – A federal judge in San Francisco has barred Charles Cathcart of Tuxedo Park, N.Y., from promoting a complex tax scheme involving numerous entities located around the globe and sales of over $1.25 billion in securities, the Justice Department announced today.

Judge Phyllis J. Hamilton of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California signed the permanent injunction order. The judge entered the injunction based on an extensive record, including facts to which the parties stipulated after Cathcart advised the court on the first day of trial that he would not put on any evidence to refute the government’s evidence.

The record indicated that Cathcart, a Ph.D. economist, developed a scheme called the "90% Loan Program" and promoted it throughout the United States through companies he controlled — including Derivium Capital LLC and Derivium USA.

The 90% Loan Program falsely claimed customers could exchange their appreciated stock for loan payments equal to 90% of the stocks’ value without paying income tax on their capital gains. It also purported to allow the tax-free return of those customers’ stocks at maturity if the customers repaid the "loans."

But in fact, the record shows, customers’ stocks were sold immediately, with 90% of the sale proceeds going to make the purported "loans" to the customers, and the other 10% being retained by the promoters. Customers were told the loans were made by independent third-party lenders, but in fact the supposed loans were made through sham companies that Cathcart created and controlled.

The court record shows that Cathcart, through the 90% Loan Program, sold more than $1.25 billion worth of customers’ stock in some 3,100 transactions, leaving more than $100 million for himself and the other promoters after payment of 90% of the sale proceeds to customers as purported loans. The government complaint in the case alleged that the scheme cost the U.S. Treasury an estimated $230 million or more.

Taxpayers are required by federal law to report sales of stock on their income tax returns and pay tax on gains from the sale. Judge Hamilton previously ruled that Cathcart’s customers were not receiving loans, because the transactions were in fact sales. Thus, Cathcart’s representations to customers that they were receiving loans were false statements about the scheme’s tax benefits.

Key Facts

🔒 Get the grimiest stories delivered weekly. Subscribe free →

Browse More

All California Cases →All Districts →

Source: https://www.justice.gov/archives/opa/pr/california-court-permanently-enjoins-developer-derivium-90-loan-tax-scheme