Former IRS employee sentenced to over one year in prison for tax evasion

 

Date: July 6, 2022

Contact: newsroom@ci.irs.gov

PHILADELPHIA — United States Attorney Jacqueline C. Romero and Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General Stuart M. Goldberg of the Justice Department's Tax Division announced that Wayne Garvin currently of Columbia, South Carolina, and a former IRS employee, was sentenced to 13 months in prison, three years of supervised release, and ordered to pay $74,662 restitution for filing false tax returns and providing fabricated records to the IRS in an attempt to obstruct an audit of those returns.

In March 2022, the defendant pleaded guilty to multiple tax fraud charges. Garvin was a long-time IRS employee who most recently worked as a Supervisory Associate Advocate with the IRS's Taxpayer Advocate Service in Philadelphia. For the years 2012 through 2016, while working as an IRS employee, Garvin prepared and filed with the IRS personal income tax returns on which he claimed false deductions and expenses associated with rental properties, fictitious real estate taxes on his personal residence, and fabricated charitable contributions. Moreover, on his 2013 tax return, Garvin deducted nearly $16,000 in false expenses associated with his employment with the U.S. Army Reserves. Although Garvin was formerly a member of the U.S. Army Reserves, he did not perform any reservist duty in 2013 and was not entitled to deduct any expenses related to that employment. In total, Garvin caused a loss to the IRS of more than $74,000.

Further, court documents also show that after the IRS began an audit of the defendant's 2013 and 2014 tax returns, Garvin attempted to obstruct the audit by submitting fictitious documents to the IRS. For example, to justify the false deductions and expenses on his tax returns, Garvin fabricated and submitted to the IRS auditors receipts from a church, invoices from a contractor and a letter from the Department of the Army. After learning he was under criminal investigation, Garvin later submitted some of the same fraudulent documents to IRS-Criminal Investigation.

The case was investigated by the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation, and is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Tiwana Wright and Trial Attorney Melissa S. Siskind of the Department of Justice Tax Division.