Cannot wait to see
who gets what for
laundering
when all the Q stuff materializes.
one count of money laundering carries a 20-year maximum sentence,
https://www.lotterypost.com/news/345442
May 23, 2023, 1:22 pm
Massachusetts Lottery
State's top lottery ticket cashers' attempt to create statewide network of scammers halted for good
By Kate Northrop
A father and son duo from Massachusetts was sentenced to prison in federal court on Monday, concluding the case surrounding an absurd number of prize claims that turned out to be fraudulent.
Ali Jaafar, 63, and Yousef Jaafar, 29, both of Watertown, have received their sentencing five months after being convicted of multiple counts related to a scheme that cheated the IRS out of millions of dollars.
The scheme, commonly referred to as "ten-percenting," involves buying winning lottery tickets from players at a discount so that the winner can hide their identity from the state lottery commission, which enforces a state and federal tax on prizes and withholds owed debts, like child support, from winnings.
Meanwhile, the fraudsters who purchased the winning tickets from lottery winners would cash in on the full prize. The Jaafars reported the winnings on their tax returns but avoided paying federal income taxes by claiming false gambling losses.
The family's actions resulted in a total federal tax loss of $6,082,578.
According to the United States Department of Justice, one count of conspiracy to defraud the IRS comes with a maximum sentence of five years in prison,
one count of money laundering carries a 20-year maximum sentence,
nd one count of filing false tax returns provides for a maximum of three years.
"By defrauding the Massachusetts Lottery and the Internal Revenue Service, the Jaafars cheated the system and took millions of hard-earned taxpayers' dollars," United States Attorney Rachael S. Rollins said in a press release in December. "This guilty verdict shows that elaborate money laundering schemes and tax frauds will be rooted out and prosecuted."
Over the course of eight years, the Jaafar family had cashed in more than 13,000 winning tickets, a phenomenon that statisticians would attribute astronomical odds to.
Court documents show that Ali had simply told his accountant that "he was lucky."
Cont: