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For
Immediate Release: |
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For
Further Information Contact: |
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January
20, 2006
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Office
of The Attorney General
-
Nancy Kaplen,
Acting Attorney General
Division
of Criminal Justice
- Vaughn L. McKoy, Director
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John
R. Hagerty
609-984-1936
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Monmouth
County Attorney/businessman Sentenced to
4 Years in Jail and Ordered to Pay $4.8
Million after Pleading Guilty to Tax Fraud
Division of Criminal
Justice and Division of Taxation Target
Tax Fraud |
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TRENTON
— Division of Criminal Justice Director
Vaughn L. McKoy and Robert Thompson, Director,
New Jersey Division of Taxation, today
announced that a joint-agency investigation
targeting the willful failure to pay state/federal
withholding and sales taxes has resulted
in a Monmouth County attorney/businessman
being sentenced to four years in state
prison and ordered to pay the state and
federal governments $4.8 million in unpaid
taxes, penalties, and interest.
“This
successful prosecution targeted the willful,
deliberate, and blatant actions of an
attorney-turned-businessman who withheld
millions of dollars from the state treasury
by hiding various business interests to
avoid paying withholding and sales taxes,”
said Criminal Justice Director McKoy.
Taxation Director Thompson said, “The
outcome of this case is testament to the
cooperation among several agencies on
an egregious crime of fraud. Taxation
is gratified that the interagency collaboration
resulted in a conviction of this magnitude.
"
According to Assistant Attorney General
Andrew Rossner, Deputy Director, Division
of Criminal Justice, Michael J. Buonopane,
45, Hill Pond Lane, Rumson, Monmouth County,
was today sentenced by Monmouth County
Superior Court Judge Francis P. DeStefano
to four years in state prison and ordered
to pay $4.8 million in back taxes, interest,
and penalties. Buonopane was also ordered
to surrender his license to practice law
and a CPA license.
The Division of Criminal Justice noted
that Buonopane pleaded guilty on June
3, 2005 to tax fraud charges of misapplication
of entrusted property, filing false or
fraudulent New Jersey income tax returns,
and failure to file New Jersey corporate
business tax returns. Buonopane was charged
with the theft of $2,074,362 in federal
withholding taxes, $2,014,386 in New Jersey
sales taxes, $654,055 in unemployment/disability
taxes, and $106,012 in state gross income
withholding taxes.
The criminal charges resulted from a 25-count
State Grand Jury indictment returned on
Nov. 30, 2004. The indictment followed
an extensive tax fraud investigation initiated
by auditors and agents assigned to the
Department of Labor & Workforce Development
in December, 2003 which targeted Buonopane’s
failure to forward unemployment and disability
insurance monies to Labor & Workforce
Development.
The State Grand Jury indictment charged
that from January, 1999 - January, 2004,
Buonopane, the owner/operator of 20 car
servicing businesses (car wash and auto
repair/service facilities) located in
Monmouth, Ocean, Middlesex, Union, Essex,
and Morris counties, failed to pay federal
and state taxes -- tax monies that were
withheld from employee wages and retained
by Buonopane. The investigation determined
that in 1988, Buonopane purchased Mr.
Good Lube, Inc., an auto repair facility
located in Freehold, Monmouth County.
It was charged that over ten years Buonopane,
listed in official documents as the incorporator,
registered agent and President of Mr.
Good Lube, Inc., expanded the business
to include 14 Mr. Good Lube garages and
six car wash facilities located in six
New Jersey counties. Buonopane failed
to reveal ownership interests and/or register
the car wash and auto service businesses
with appropriate state regulatory agencies;
ignored requests to file required reports
with Labor & Workforce Development;
failed to remit withholding and state
sales tax payments; and failed to file
state and federal tax returns.
A list of Buonopane’s auto service
businesses include:
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Buonopane Corporate Office, 400 West
Main St., Freehold, Monmouth County;
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Mr. Good Lube 10 Minute Oil Change,
380 Route 9 North, Englishtown, Monmouth
County;
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Mr. Good Lube 10 Minute Oil Change,
One Broadway, Freehold, Monmouth County;
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Mr. Good Lube 10 Minute Oil Change and
Country Sudser Car Wash Center,
4629 Route 9 North, Howell, Monmouth
County;
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Mr. Good Lube 10 Minute Oil Change and
Country Sudser Car Wash,
1898-1900 Highway 35 South, Middletown,
Monmouth County;
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Mr. Good Lube 10 Minute Oil Change,
942 Route 34, Matawan, Monmouth County;
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Country Sudser Car Wash, 470 Highway
36 North, Highlands, Monmouth County;
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Mr. Good Lube 10 Minute Oil Change,
473 Broad St., Shrewsbury, Monmouth
County;
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Mr. Good Lube 10 Minute Oil Change,
5 Main St., Chester, Morris County;
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Flanders Country Sudser Car Wash, 286
Route 206, Flanders, Morris County;
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Mr. Good Lube 10 Minute Oil Change,
609 Route 18 South, East Brunswick,
Middlesex County;
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Mr. Good Lube 10 Minute Oil Change,
3974 Route 1 North, South Brunswick,
Middlesex County;
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Mr. Good Lube 10 Minute Oil Change,
200 South Avenue West, Westfield, Union
County;
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Mr. Good Lube 10 Minute Oil Change and
Country Sudser Car Wash,
1045 Cedar Bridge Avenue, Brick, Ocean
County;
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Country Sudser Car Wash, 1888 West County
Line Road, Lakewood, Ocean County;
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Mr. Good Lube 10 Minute Oil Change,
1712 Springfield Ave., Maplewood, Essex
County;
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Mr. Good Lube 10 Minute Oil Change,
347 Broad St., Bloomfield, Essex County;
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Mr. Good Lube 10 Minute Oil Change,
210 South Livingston Ave., Livingston,
Essex County.
“This
investigation uncovered the single-largest
criminal tax fraud scam perpetrated by
a single individual in recent history,”
said Deputy Director Rossner. “The
prosecution and resulting guilty plea
uncovered evidence that Buonopane intentionally
evaded state tax regulations in order
to keep the money and to live a lavish
lifestyle in a three million dollar Rumson
mansion - a lifestyle maintained on the
backs of minimum-wage employees and honest
New Jersey taxpayers.”
The investigation and prosecution included
the cooperation of several state agencies,
including the Department of the Treasury,
Division of Taxation - Office of Criminal
Investigations, the Division of Criminal
Justice - Financial Crimes Bureau, the
Department of Labor & Workforce Development,
and the Office of Government Integrity.
Division of Taxation Chief Investigator
Susan Kane, Richard Mawer, Assistant Chief
Investigator, Division of Taxation, and
State Investigators Robert Walker and
Ray Gardner of the Division of Criminal
Justice - Financial Crimes Bureau, coordinated
the investigation. Auditors Debra Lewaine
and Kevin Curry of the Division of Taxation
- Office of Criminal Investigation, and
Investigators Howard Solomon and Michael
DeTroia, Labor & Workforce Development
- Division of Employer Accounts, provided
additional investigative and auditing
assistance. Supervising Deputy Attorney
General Frank Brady, Deputy Attorney Denise
Grugan, Division of Criminal Justice -
Financial Crimes Bureau and Deputy Attorney
General Nancy Faust, Office of Government
Integrity, coordinated the prosecution
and presented the case to the State Grand
Jury.
A copy of the State Grand Jury indictment
and related documents are available via
the Division of Criminal Justice Web site
at www.njdcj.org.
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