Sherry Jackson's Conviction Upheld
Thursday September 11, 2008
FOUR
YEAR PRISON SENTENCE AFFIRMED FOR GEORGIA TAX DEFIER
Former IRS Employee Convicted of Tax Crimes
WASHINGTON – The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh
Circuit
affirmed a four year prison sentence for tax defier crimes committed by
Sherry Peel Jackson, a former Internal Revenue Service (IRS) employee
and tax preparer, the Justice Department announced today
In October 2007, a jury found Jackson of Stone Mountain,
Ga., guilty
on four counts of failure to file income tax returns. Jackson was
sentenced, on Feb. 14, 2008, by U.S. District Judge Orinda D. Evans to
four consecutive prison terms of 12 months each.
According to the charging document and evidence at
trial, beginning
in 2000, Jackson willfully and intentionally did not file her own
individual tax returns. At that time, she also operated a tax
preparation business and continued to prepare, submit and file
individual tax returns for her customers. For the next three years,
Jackson intentionally did not file her tax returns, despite an income
of more than $400,000 in that time period. According to testimony at
trial, Jackson said she did not file the returns because she did not
know what the term "individual" meant in tax laws. The evidence at
trial showed that Jackson in fact knew her legal duty to file with the
IRS and intentionally chose to disregard the law.
Jackson raised several common tax defier arguments in
her appeal,
such as challenges to the jurisdiction of the court and a claim that
the IRS Form 1040 did not comply with the Paperwork Reduction Act. All
of Jackson’s arguments on appeal were rejected.
In May 2008, a federal court in Florida found
Jackson to have been advancing frivolous tax arguments at a Pinnacle
Quest International (PQI) sales conference and in PQI promotional
materials. The court barred PQI and its principals from publicizing tax
fraud schemes.
“This clear affirmation of such a strong sentence should
be a sign
to tax defiers across the country that frivolous arguments and bogus
schemes do not work and can land them in prison for years,” said Nathan
J. Hochman, Assistant Attorney General of the Justice Department’s Tax
Division. “Under the National Tax Defier Initiative, the Tax Division
continues to vigorously enforce federal tax laws against tax defier
conduct throughout the nation.”
Assistant Attorney General Hochman thanked the Justice
Department
attorneys who represented the federal government in the criminal case
against Jackson and the IRS-Criminal Investigation agents who assisted
them. Tax Division attorney Joseph Giannullo and Assistant U.S.
Attorney Richard M. Langway handled the case in the federal district
court. Assistant U.S. Attorney Langway also represented the government
in the Court of Appeals.
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