『Shell Game in Steel-Toe Boots』のカバーアート

Shell Game in Steel-Toe Boots

Shell Game in Steel-Toe Boots

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Rene Mauricio Escobar and Juana Nelida Escobar operated Escobar Plastering in Orlando, Florida. Federal prosecutors said they used the company to help construction subcontractors pay workers off the books, avoid payroll taxes, and avoid workers’ compensation insurance premiums.

According to the DOJ, the defendants caused certificates of insurance in Escobar Plastering’s name to be sent to construction contractors, representing that subcontractors’ workers were employed by and covered under Escobar Plastering. Prosecutors said the insurance policies were actually based on applications showing only a handful of employees and minimal payroll.

The government said thousands of payroll checks totaling approximately $148,760,824 were deposited into Escobar Plastering bank accounts. The defendants then withdrew cash to pay workers after keeping a 7% to 8% fee, while no one withheld or paid over payroll taxes to the IRS.

Rene Escobar was sentenced to four years and nine months in federal prison. Juana Escobar was sentenced to two years. The court ordered them to pay $37,174,388 in restitution to the IRS for unpaid payroll taxes.

Jason explains how construction payroll fraud unravels, why cash payroll leaves a paper trail, and what business owners should do instead: classify workers correctly, use real payroll systems, file Forms 941, make employment tax deposits, reconcile wage reporting, and get privilege-protected advice early when the facts show possible willfulness.

This episode is for business owners, contractors, subcontractors, payroll companies, bookkeepers, tax preparers, CPAs, enrolled agents, and anyone who wants to understand how payroll tax problems become IRS-CI cases.

Key Takeaways:

  • Payroll is evidence. Checks, deposits, cash withdrawals, Forms 941, W-2s, insurance certificates, and bank records all tell a story.
  • Off-the-books payroll can create tax, insurance, immigration, labor, and fraud exposure.
  • Employers generally must withhold federal income tax, Social Security tax, and Medicare tax from employee wages and pay the employer share of Social Security and Medicare taxes.
  • Employers use Form 941 to report federal income tax withheld from employees’ paychecks and both the employer and employee shares of Social Security and Medicare taxes.
  • Using a payroll provider can help administratively, but IRS instructions warn that employers generally remain responsible for tax filings, deposits, and payments even when a third party performs payroll functions.
  • If a payroll problem involves false documents, cash payments, sham subcontractor structures, or multi-year noncompliance, attorney-client privilege matters.
  • The goal is to keep payroll tax problems in the civil IRS lane whenever possible through clean filings, corrected returns, current deposits, installment agreements, penalty analysis, and documented compliance cleanup.

Suggested Timestamps:

00:00: Cold open, $148 million in payroll and $37 million in unpaid payroll taxes

00:30: Branded intro, Final Notice: Real Tax Cases. Exposed.

00:45: Who Rene and Juana Escobar were

01:30: Escobar Plastering and the construction payroll setup

02:45: Insurance certificates, minimal payroll, and hundreds of workers

04:00: How payroll checks became cash

05:15: Why the paper trail matters

06:15: IRS-CI, HSI, and workers’ compensation investigators

07:30: The sentencing and restitution

08:15: What the defendants should have done instead

09:15: Payroll compliance basics, Forms 941, deposits, and W-2s

10:15: Civil cleanup options before criminal exposure hardens

11:15: Why privilege matters in payroll tax cases

12:00: Final lesson, payroll is evidence

12:30: Close and call to action

Resources Mentioned:

  • DOJ case source: https://www.justice.gov/usao-mdfl/pr/two-orlando-residents-sentenced-148-million-construction-payroll-scheme-defrauded-irs
  • IRS Form 941 information: https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-941
  • IRS employment tax deposit rules: https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc757
  • IRS Criminal Investigation Voluntary Disclosure Practice: https://www.irs.gov/compliance/criminal-investigation/irs-criminal-investigation-voluntary-disclosure-practice
  • The Law Office of Jason Carr, PLLC: https://carrtaxlaw.com
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