Internal Revenue Service – Executive Director Of California Museum Of Ancient Art Sentenced For Tax Fraud & Assisting Others To Defraud IRS

Los Angeles, California – LAWFUEL – The Legal Newswire – In United States District Court this afternoon, a North Hollywood man was sentenced to one year and one day in federal prison for tax fraud and for aiding and abetting others in the preparation of false income tax returns that claimed charitable contribution deductions to which the return filers were not entitled.

Appearing before United States District Judge Florence-Marie Cooper in Los Angeles, Jerome Berman, the Executive Director of the California Museum of Ancient Art, was sentenced to spend one year and one day in federal prison, pay a fine of $4,000, and ordered to pay restitution to the Internal Revenue Service totaling $263,178.90 for tax related crimes he pleaded guilty to committing earlier this year. Berman was sentenced for creating and participating in a scheme that fraudulently claimed increased income tax deductions for charitable contributions on his own individual tax returns as well as aiding others in claiming fraudulently increased charitable contribution deductions on their own returns for having made art donations to the California Museum of Ancient Art.

Berman’s plea agreement, filed in January, 2007, sets forth that he was a 50% partner in the Oxford Collection Partnership and was the Executive Director of the California Museum of Ancient Art. In an effort to encourage the purchase of art by dealers and individuals, Berman would advocate the tax benefits of purchasing items and donating said items to the California Museum of Ancient Art. To accomplish this, Berman orchestrated inflated charitable contribution deductions for himself and others by backdating the actual purchase date of art works that were charitable contributions to his museum. By backdating the purchase date to a date that was more than 12 months prior to the donation of the artwork, Berman and his customer/contributors could claim a charitable deduction using the appraised value of the artwork. According to the Internal Revenue Code, if a donation of art that is held for less than 12 months is made, the contributor is only allowed to claim the purchase price as a charitable contribution deduction. By backdating, Berman and his customers could claim the appraised value of the artwork as a deduction, which in most instances was 300% higher than the actual purchase price.

Berman admitted that, from 1997 through 2001, he aided and assisted in the preparation of at least eleven false income tax returns for others in this scheme, claiming false charitable contribution deductions on their tax returns of at least $565,000. Additionally, Berman’s claiming of fraudulent charitable contribution deductions on his own income tax returns resulted in a tax loss of $82,664. As part of his plea, Berman agreed to make full restitution for the losses resulting from his scheme. The losses attributed solely to the filing of Berman’s own income tax returns, including penalties and interest, totals $263,178.90.

Judge Cooper ordered Berman to begin serving his prison sentence on December 5, 2007.

The investigation and prosecution of Berman was handled by IRS Criminal Investigation and the United States Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles.

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