Who knew the photo processing business is so ripe with opportunities to commit fraud (and that it even still exists)? According to a press release published by the United States Attorney’s office, a Kentucky man used the photo processing business he owned to bill insurance providers for nearly $650,000 in fraudulent claims and then failed to report the proceeds as income on his tax returns.
Court documents reveal that the man, assisted by an unnamed accomplice, received six sizeable insurance payments in response to fraudulent invoices he submitted over a six-year period. In the claims, he alleged that his photo processing equipment had suffered damage and then falsely claimed that he had replaced the equipment. (“Sorry, ma’am, I can’t do anything to fix your family’s strange red eyes.”) One claim blamed a power surge on lightning; another reported broken neon signs.
He also used two different Social Security numbers to file his taxes, resulting in an $82,381 tax loss, and in 2010 and 2012 failed to report $417,156 in insurance payments as taxable income, as required by law. (This scammer is too sloppy to be “picture perfect.”)
An investigation by the Kentucky Insurance Fraud Investigation Division ultimately landed with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigations and the businessman was brought to justice for filing false tax returns and conspiring to commit mail and wire fraud. Ultimately, he was sentenced to 30 months (more than two years) in prison and ordered to pay restitution of $649,506.
As if large-scale insurance fraud wasn’t enough, adding tax fraud to the mix is a sure way to get nabbed, and the results don’t make a pretty picture.
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