3`d6"rGR-0195-`
Transcription
3`d6"rGR-0195-`
FrrsEt? rHY, t5 16:F*sm*p T'NITED STATES DISTRICT COT]RT %, DISTRICT OF OREGON 3'd6"rGR-0195-' TINITBD STATES OF AMERICA v. KI INFORMATION GILBERT "MACE" DESMARAIS, KANDACE DESMARAIS, 18 U.S.C. S 371 - Conspiracy to Use an Interstate Facility to Promote or Facilitate Prostitution Offenses Defendant. 18 U.S.C. S 371 United States - Conspiracy to Defraud the THE TINITED STATES ATTORNEY CHARGES: GENERAL ALLEGATIONS At all times relevant to this Information: 1. The defendants and their coconspirators owned, controlled, and/or managed the following adult entertainment businesses (collectively called "the businesses"), either strip clubs or adult video/sex toy stores, all of which were located in the metropolitan area of Portland, Oregon: o The Landing strip (formerly known as pop-A-Top), a strip club o The Oh! Zone, a strip club . Sugar Shack, a strip club o Peek-A-Boos (formerly chantilly Lace), a strip club . Video Visions, adult video/sex toy store 2. o Dillingers Pub, a strip club o Sugar Shack Too, a strip club o Video Visions Plus (alVaVideo Superstore), an adult video/sex toy store . Tommy's, a strip club o Tommy's Too, a strip club The defendants and their coconspirators also owned, controlled, and/or managed a restaurant called Pelican Buy, located in the same cluster of businesses as Sugar Shack, Peek-A-Boos, and Video Visions. 3. The defendants and their coconspirators owned and operated the businesses through a group of corporations they owned and/or controlled. The following corporations purportedly owned and operated the following businesses: Corporation Pop-A-Top Pub, Business(es) Owned and Operated Inc. Dillingers Pub, Inc. Far Flung, Ltd. Video Super Store, Gumptions, Utilize, 4. Dillingers pub The Oh! Zone Sugar Shack Sugar Shack Too Peek-A-Boos Ltd. Inc. Inc. Briney Deep, The Landing Strip Ltd. Video Visions Video Visions Plus Tommy's Tommy,s Too Pelican Bay Restaurant The defendants and their coconspirators attracted customers to the strip clubs by featuring fully nude female dancers. INT'ORMATION page2 5. Many of the businesses had small rooms on their premises. These rooms, called private show rooms (or just show rooms) were typically fumished with a small couch, achait, a table, and a device for playing music. Collectively, the businesses had l9 private show rooms on their premises. 6. The defendants placed and operated automated teller machines ("ATMs") in many of the businesses. The ATMs were facilities operating in interstate commerce. 7. The IRS is an agency of the United States Department of Treasury responsible for administering and enforcing the tax laws of the United States and collecting taxes owed to the United States Treasury. COUNT ONE [18 U.S.C. S 371- Conspiracy to Use an Interstate Facility to Promote or Facilitate Prostitution Offenses] 1. Beginning in approximately January 2008 and ending in approxim atelyJune 2010, in the District of Oregon and elsewhere, defendants, GILBERT "MACE" DESMARAIS and KANDACE DESMARAIS, did knowingly and willfully combine conspire, confederate, and agree with other persons, both known and unknowr to the Grand Jury, to carry out the following object in furtherance of the conspiracy: OBJECT OF THE CONSPIRACY 2. The defendants and their coconspirators agreed to use facilities in interstate commerce, to wit automatic teller machines ("ATMs") operating in interstate commerce, with the intent to promote, to manage, to establish, to carry on, and to facilitate the promotion, management, establishment, and carrying on of unlawful activity, namely, prostitution offenses in violation of the laws of Oregon (specifically INFORMATION Page 3 Or. Rev. Stat. section 167.012),inviolationof Title 18, United States Code, Section tes2(a)(3). MANNER AND MEANS OF THE CONSPIRACY 3. DEfENdANtS GILBERT..MACE,, DESMARAIS and KANDACE DESMARAIS, and their coconspirators carried out their conspiracy using the following manner and means, among others: The defendants and their coconspirators allowed nude dancers, commonly referted to as strippers, to perform at the businesses. The defendants and their coconspirators typically, but not always, required each dancer to pay approximately $ 15 per shift in order to perform. This payment was called a "stage fee" or "dancer fee" and was always paid in cash. b. The strippers would perform 30-minute "private shows" for customers in the private show rooms, which the defendants and their coconspirator maintained for this purpose. To obtain a "private show" a customer had to pay at least $160. c. All customers paid for private shows in cash. Many customers obtained some or all of that cash from ATM machines on the premises. The defendants and their coconspirators knew and intended that customers regularly use cash from the d. ATM machines to pay for acts of prostitution. of the minimum $160 customers paid for "private shows,,, $60 went to .,the house," meaning these funds went to the defendants and their coconspirators. The strippers retained the remainder of the fees paid for the "private shows.,, INFORMATION Page 4 e. The private shows purportedly involved a stripper performing nude dances for the customer ffid, at most, the stripper and the customer masfurbating themselves. In reality, the defendants, their coconspirators, many customers, and many strippers understood and intended that a'oprivate show,, would involve a stripper engaging in one or more acts of prostitution with the customers and, in fact, the strippers routinely performed acts of prostitution with their customers during "private shows." In other words, strippers performed sexual acts on their customers in refurn for the customers having paid the strippers at least $100 and "the house" $60, often with cash from the ATMs. Sometimes, the strippers negotiated a higher fee for the acts of prostitution than the minimum $100. f. Some of the strip clubs did not have private show rooms on their premises. Strippers who were working at these strip clubs would walk with their customers to one of the nearby businesses that had private show rooms. For instance, the Landing Strip did not have private show rooms so strippers working there would walk their customers across a parking lot to The OH! Zone, which had on its premises four private show rooms and a small entry atea. g. To conseal the conspiracy and to conceal their knowing involvement in the acts of prostifution at the businesses, the defendants and their coconspirators required the strippers to sign a typewritten statement, commonly called a dancer slip, each time the stripper performed a private show. The dancer slip stated the dancer was "leasing this room for the purpose of performing one- INT'ORMATION Page 5 on-one modeling shows" and that her "actions state laws" and will comply with all Oregon "No sEx oF ANy zuND, No TOUCHING oF ANy KfI{D!". OVERT ACTS IN FIIRTIIERANCE OF THE CONSPIRACY 4. DEfENdANtS GILBERT..MACE,,DESMARAIS and KANDACE DESMARAIS, and their coconspirators committed the following overt acts, among others, in the District of Oregon and elsewhere, in furtherance of the conspiracy and to effect the object of the conspiracy: a. The defendants and their coconspirators regularly refilled the ATMs with proceeds from the operation of the businesses, each such refilling being a separate overt act. b. The defendants and their coconspirators regularly accepted reimbursement for the cash dispensed by the ATMs by means of electronic fund transfers to their bank account in Oregon from payment-processing services located outside the State of Oregon, each such transfer being a separate overt act. c. The defendants and their coconspirators allowed strippers to use the businesses' private show rooms to perform acts of prostifution on customers, each allowance of such use being a separate overt act. d. The defendants and their coconspirators required each customer involved in a J private show during which a stripper would perform one or more acts of prostifution on the customer to pay $60 to "the house" as a fee for use of the private show room, the collection of each such $60 payment being a separate overt act. INFORMATION Page 6 e. The defendants and their coconspirators required the strippers to sign a dancer slip each time the stripper performed a private show, each such signing being a separate overt act. All in violation of 18 U.S.C. S 371. COUNT TWO [18 u.s.c. S 371 - conspiracy to Defraud the united states] Paragraphs 1 through 7 of the General Allegations, and paragraphs2through 4 Count I of are incorporated herein. OBJECTS OF THE CONSPIRACY 1. Beginning before January 1, 2008 and continuing up to and including June 16,2010, within the District of Oregon, and elsewhere, defendants GILBERT "MACE,, DESMARAIS and KANDACE DESMARAIS and others known and unknown to the grand jury, unlawfully and knowingly combined, conspired, confederated, and agreed together to defraud the United States by deceitful and dishonest means by impeding, impairing, obstructing, and defeating the lawful government functions of the IRS, an agency of the United States, in the ascertainment, computation, assessment, and collection of revenue, that is, federal individual income taxes, corporate ta:res, and payroll taxes. MAI\iNER AND MEANS oF TIIE CONSPIRACY 2. DEfENdANtS GILBERT..MACE,,DESMARAIS and KANDACE DESMARAIS and others, known and unknown to the grand jury, carried out their conspiracy using the following manner and means, among others: INFORMATION pageT The defendants and their coconspirators established a "cash only" policy at the businesses, in part to prevent the IRS from calculating the correct amount of gross receipts for each business and to facilitate the "skimming" of large amounts of cash. b. The defendants and their coconspirators destroyed or caused to be destroyed daily records of cash receipts, including records showing private show receipts and dancer stage fees. c. The defendants and their coconspirators each week reconciled or caused to be reconciled the total cash receipts and cash expenditures for the businesses, including the total amount of cash derived from private shows and dancer stage fees. d. The defendants and their coconspirators each week delivered or caused delivery of the accumulated cash receipts of the businesses to the home of one of the coconspirators. e. The defendants and their coconspirators used or caused the use of the cash receipts of the businesses to make cash payments for most expenses associated with the daily operation of the businesses, including payroll, to, in part, prevent the IRS from calculating the correct amount of gross receipts for each business and the payroll taxes owed by the businesses. f. The defendants and their coconspirators each year gave a taxrefurn preparer false information about the amounts of receipts and payroll expenses of the businesses, concealed from the tax return preparer all information about the cash receipts from private shows and dancer stage fees, and provided false information about TNFORMATION Page 8 the number and identities of the employees of the businesses, intending the tax return preparer would use this false information to prepare corporate, payroll, and individual tax refurns that would underreport the amount of gross income and taxable income of, and tax due from, the businesses and the coconspirators. g. The defendants and their coconspirators regularly used unreported cash receipts from the businesses to pay personal expenses. h. The defendants and their coconspirators regularly transported or transmitted, or caused to be transported and transmitted large amounts of unreported cash receipts to defendant at his residence in Mexico. i. The defendants and their coconspirators created and used a group of corporations to own and operate the businesses but in reality to conceal from the IRS the true ownership and control of the businesses and to assist in the concealment and fraudulent understatement of business receipts, payroll taxes, ta:rable income, and tax due. j. The defendants and their coconspirators caused approximately $2,600,5 92 in taxable business receipts not to be reported to the IRS, causing a total income ta:< underpayment of approximately $728,000. OVERT ACTS TN FURTHERANCE OF THB CONSPIRACY 3. In furtherance of said conspiracy and to effect the objects thereof between January 1, 2006 and continuing up to and including June 16,2010, GILBERT o.\z[4gp,, DESMARAIS and KANDACE DESMARAIS, and others known and unknown to the grand jury, committed the following overt acts, among others, in the District of Oregon and elsewhere: INFORMATION Page 9 The defendants and their coconspirators destroyed daily records of the receipts of the businesses and directed and/or caused others to destroy daily records of the receipts of the business, each such destruction of records being a separate overt act. b. Each tax year, the defendants and their coconspirators gave a paid tax refurn preparer false information about the receipts of the businesses, each such occurrence being a separate overt act. c. For tax years 2006,2007, and 2008, the defendants and their coconspirators filed federal corporation tax returns, federal individual income ta>r returns, and federal payroll tax returns that, with respect to the corporation tax returns, substantially underreported the receipts of businesses the corporations purportedly owned and operated, with respect to the individual income tar returns, substantially underreported income derived from the businesses, and with respect to the payroll tax retums substantially understated the payroll taxes due, the filing of each such false tax refurn being a separate overt act. All in violation of l8 U.S.C. S 371. Dated this 20th day of May 2015. Respectfully submitted, BILLY J. V/ILLIAMS SETH D. t Uni INFORMATION Bar No. #37624 (D.C.) v W. BOLIN s, osB. #aa|n t United Attorney Page 10