Crime & Safety

Skokie Man Gets Prison Sentence For Evading $1 Million in Taxes

Feds say he intentionally hid millions in offshore accounts to avoid paying taxes. This is the first verdict; feds are looking into similar cases.


The owner of a Skokie cemetery monument business was sentenced to a year and a day of federal prison time for evading $1.04 million in income taxes on more than $3.3 million in income. 

Federal prosecutors said the businessman had intentionally hidden the income in offshore financial accounts to avoid paying taxes on it. 

“(He) did not evade his taxes out of financial need or desperation.  He operated a profitable and successful business; he had more than enough money to pay his taxes.  He made a deliberate, conscious decision not to do so,” the government argued at sentencing.

U.S. District Judge John J. Tharp, Jr. also fined the defendant, Peter Troost, $32,500 and sentenced him to 200 hours of community service during a year of supervised release after his prison time. Troost, 78, lives in Skokie and owns Troost Memorials at 9853 Gross Point Road, Skokie.

Troost pleaded guilty in March to a felony charge filed in U.S. District Court, according to a statement from the U.S. Attorney's Office.

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Prosecutors said Troost failed to pay income taxes on income, including interest income on millions of dollars he held in a secret offshore financial account with UBS, a global financial services firm headquartered in Switzerland.

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According to a statement from the U.S. Attorney's office, Troost has already paid $1,039,343 in back taxes to the Internal Revenue Service, as well as a civil penalty of approximately $3.75 million, but Judge Tharp said those payments alone would not sufficiently deter wealthy individuals from failing to meet their voluntary tax obligations.

Judge Tharp ordered Troost to begin serving his sentence on Dec. 2.

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Troost Memorials is a closely-held company that designs and sells cemetery monuments and gravestones.  The business is located in a strip mall Troost owns at 9853 Gross Point Rd., Skokie, and he owns another strip mall located at 1816-44 Arlington Heights Rd., in Arlington Heights.  The defendant is not involved with Peter Troost Monument Company, of Hillside, which is a different company from Troost Memorials.

Troost was the first taxpayer charged in Federal Court in Chicago in connection with an ongoing investigation of U.S. taxpayer clients of UBS and other overseas banks that hid foreign accounts from the Internal Revenue Service.

In February 2009, UBS entered into a deferred prosecution agreement with the United States, admitting that it helped taxpayers hide accounts from the IRS.  As part of the agreement, UBS provided the government with the identities of, and account information for, certain customers of UBS’ U.S. cross-border banking business.

According to Troost’s plea agreement, from at least 1999 until 2009, he transferred hundreds of thousands of dollars from the United States to his individual offshore UBS account for the sole purpose of evading domestic income taxes.  He maintained at least one offshore UBS account between 1981 and 2009, while maintaining at least one additional joint account.  He managed both accounts with the assistance of a UBS personal banker based on the island of Jersey.  

In addition to failing to report interest income, Troost admitted that he intentionally failed to report all of his income from his monument business and his rental properties. Between 1999 and 2009, Troost failed to report income from all sources totaling $3,338,929, on which he owed $1,039,343 in federal taxes.  

In addition, Troost stated on his returns for each of those years that he did not have an interest in a financial account in a foreign country, when, in fact, he knew he maintained the offshore UBS account.

The sentence was announced Tuesday by Gary S. Shapiro, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, and James C. Lee, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation Division in Chicago.        

Defendants convicted of tax offenses face mandatory costs of prosecution and remain civilly liable to the government for any and all back taxes, as well as a potential civil fraud penalty of up to 75 percent of the underpayment plus interest.  

Federal tax law requires U.S. taxpayers pay taxes on all income earned worldwide.  Taxpayers must also report foreign financial accounts if the total value of the accounts exceeds $10,000 at any time during the calendar year.  A deliberate failure to file a Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR) with the U.S. Treasury Department can result in a penalty of up to 50 percent of the amount in the account at the time of the violation.      The government was represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian Havey.





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