HOUSTON – Robert Earl Carter, 65, a resident of Fresno and the former owner/CEO of Enterprise Advisory Services Inc. (EASI), has been ordered to federal prison for making false statements in a federal income tax return.
According to court documents, Carter pleaded guilty on September 9, 2014, to willfully making a materially false statement in his 2009 personal federal income tax return by underreporting the total income he earned that year.
Carter reported a total income of $276,270, failing to disclose an additional $309,821 in bonus income he received during that year. The investigation established that he had those bonus monies converted into a check payable directly to another company controlled by a family member. Approximately one month later, $286,821 was returned directly to Carter via a cashier’s check.
EASI also issued Carter another bonus check for $195,000 on December 22, 2009, which he deposited into his personal savings account. EASI reported this $195,000 payment as executive variable pay (a financial incentive program recognizing the contribution employees make to EASI’s success). EASI did not report the income in Carter’s W-2 form or issue a form 1099-MISC because EASI recorded this bonus payment as a reimbursement payment to Carter.
Carter did not, as required, report this $195,000 personal income on his 2009 individual federal income tax return.
Today, U.S. District Judge Keith P. Ellison, who accepted the guilty plea, handed Carter the statutory maximum of 36 months in federal prison to be immediately followed by a year of supervised release. At the hearing, additional evidence was presented including testimony from a Texas Southern University (TSU) representative who informed the court TSU had never received the half-million-dollar African Art donation Carter reported in his 2005 federal income tax return. Carter had also claimed the art, via carryover charitable donation deductions, in his 2007 to 2010 tax returns. He was further ordered to pay a $75,000 fine.
In handing down the sentence, Judge Ellison concluded Carter had not accepted responsibility for his criminal conduct and found his sworn assertion regarding the art not credible.
Previously released on bond, Carter was permitted to remain on bond and voluntarily surrender to a U.S. Bureau of Prisons facility to be determined in the near future.
The investigation was conducted by Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation and NASA – Office of Inspector General. Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel C. Rodriguez is prosecuting.
Related Federal Cases
- Theodore Paul Victor, Jr., Income Tax Evasion, Texas 2014 · Texas
- Shirley Jean Emert, Tax Evasion, Texas 2014 · South Carolina
- Brian Perez, Wire Fraud and Tax Evasion, Texas 2015 · Texas
- Jefferson Kincade, Tax Refund Theft, Texas 2015 · South Carolina
- Lawrence Michael Day, Conspiracy to Commit Mail and Wire Fraud, Tax Fraud, Texas 2008 · Texas
Key Facts
- State: Texas
- Category: White Collar Crime
- Source: DOJ Press Release â†â€â€
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