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Uncle Same plays rufffff

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  • Uncle Same plays rufffff

    The Associated Press
    NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -- Grammy-winning singer Lauryn Hill has been sentenced to three months in prison for failing to pay taxes on about $1 million in earnings.

    She was also sentenced Monday in Newark to three additional months of home confinement.


    The 37-year-old South Orange resident pleaded guilty last year in the case.
    During a forceful statement to the judge, Hill explained she had always meant to eventually pay the taxes but was unable to during a period of time when she dropped out of the music business.

    Before the sentencing, her attorney said Hill had paid more than $970,000 to satisfy the state and federal tax liabilities.

    Hill had faced a maximum sentence of one year each of the three counts. Her attorney had sought probation.
    It's not clear when or where she'd report to prison

    Last edited by HL; May 6, 2013, 06:19 PM.
    The only time TRUTH will hurt you...is if you ignore it long enough

    HL

  • #2
    She dragged out the case & typically the IRS will notify you regarding the non payment of taxes and give you an opportunity to make amends.
    Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

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    • #3
      Lots of entertainers do not understand the Business aspect of their art.

      It's called Entertainment BUSINESS.
      The only time TRUTH will hurt you...is if you ignore it long enough

      HL

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      • #4
        Hoping the judge will let off her after a few hours because she just can't cope with being incarcerated.
        She has children,not paying taxes is probably a constitutional right,and there are other ways for punishing...(The IRS has seized assets before).
        Their choice is making a convict out of Laura Hill.

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        • #5
          I agree. I think they go after entertainers especially...singers, actors..

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          • #6
            Was Lauryn Hill singled out among tax evaders?

            Mel Evans / AP

            Consider this tale of two tax evaders.

            The first is Mary Estelle Curran. She's the 79-year-old Florida socialite who avoided taxes on more than $40 million through offshore accounts. She pled guilty to having the secret accounts and faced more than three years in prison.

            Instead, Federal District Court Judge Kenneth Ryskamp reprimanded prosecutors for pursuing Curran. He sentenced her to a year of probation and then immediately revoked the probation, setting her free without spending a minute in prison. He even suggested that Curran ask for a Presidential pardon.

            Now consider the case of Grammy-winning pop singer Lauryn Hill. She pleaded guilty to failing to file tax returns on more than $1.8 million between 2005 and 2007. She was sentenced to three months in federal prison.

            Is Hill being unfairly singled out?

            Yes and no.

            Tax attorneys say celebrities like Hill are often sentenced and prosecuted more vigorously so that officials can send a message to the public. Willie Nelson, Wesley Snipes and Nicholas Cage were all prosecuted for failing to pay taxes. (Snipes did prison time; Nelson and Cage did not).

            "Prosecutors and the IRS will deny it," said Roy Black, the famed defense attorney in Florida who represented Curran. "But everyone knows that's what's going on. They know that every newspaper in the country will have the Lauryn Hill story somewhere in the paper today. They like high-profile cases."

            Black said that charges against celebrity tax avoiders have often been filed in early April—just in time to send a message to the public to file their returns properly.

            But Black said every case is different, and the Hill case shows how much leeway judges have in sentencing for tax cases.

            In the Curran case, Black said Curran committed an act of omission rather than active tax avoidance. The overseas accounts were created by her late husband, she argued, and she mistakenly failed to report them to the IRS. She also tried to report the accounts to the IRS under an amnesty program but was turned down.

            "She didn't create the accounts," Black said. "She had mitigating circumstances. It wasn't like someone setting up these accounts to hide income."

            She also paid a hefty fine of $21.6 million as well as back taxes.

            In the Hill case, prosecutors said Hill earned $2.3 million over five years that she failed to report and had an unpaid tax bill of close to $1 million. She paid back the entire $970,000 she owes to settle her state and federal taxes and penalties.

            Hill faced more than two years in prison. Her attorney, Nathan Hochman, helped to argue the time down, saying that Hill didn't falsify or file fake returns and that other celebrities—like Willie Nelson— were spared prison. Hill, a single mother of six, also said she didn't want to be away from her children. She receives $15,000 a month in child support from the father of her children, Rohan Marley (son of singer Bob Marley).

            As the judge put it: "The defendant does not deserve a get-out-of-jail card for deigning to pay what she owes."
            "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

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