Detroit-area software developer sentenced to prison for employment tax crimes

 

Did not pay the IRS more than 1.1 million dollars in employment taxes

Date: March 15, 2023

Contact: newsroom@ci.irs.gov

A Michigan business owner was sentenced today to 12 months and one day in prison for failing to collect and pay over to the IRS employment taxes withheld from his employees' wages.

According to court documents and statements made in court, Yigal Ziv of West Bloomfield owned and operated Multinational Technologies, Inc. (MTI), a software development firm based in Walled Lake. Ziv was responsible for filing MTI's quarterly employment tax returns and collecting and paying to the IRS payroll taxes withheld from employees' wages. From the first quarter of 2014 through the first quarter of 2018, Ziv collected approximately $691,000 in employment taxes from MTI's employees, but did not file employment tax returns or pay the withheld taxes to the IRS. Even after learning of the IRS's ongoing criminal investigation in May 2018, Ziv did not file MTI's employment tax returns from the fourth quarter of 2019 through the fourth quarter of 2020 and did not pay the IRS approximately $199,000 in payroll taxes withheld from MTI's employees. During that same period, Ziv directed MTI to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars for his personal benefit, including home mortgage payments, luxury auto lease payments and department store purchases. In total, Ziv caused a tax loss to the IRS of $1,169,000.

In addition to the term of imprisonment, U.S. District Judge David M. Lawson for the Eastern District of Michigan ordered Ziv to serve one year of supervised release and to pay a $5,000 fine and $897,271.80 in restitution to the United States.

Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General Stuart M. Goldberg of the Justice Department's Tax Division and Acting Special Agent-in-Charge Charles Miller of IRS-Criminal Investigation Detroit Field Office made the announcement.

IRS-Criminal Investigation investigated the case.

Trial Attorneys Kenneth C. Vert and George Meggali of the Justice Department's Tax Division prosecuted the case.